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International Holocaust Remembrance Day

shack

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International Holocaust Remembrance Day 2023: All you need to know (firstpost.com)

The UN General Assembly adopted resolution 60/7 to declare 27 January as the International Holocaust Remembrance Day on 1 November, 2005. The day marks the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau. The Resolution 60/7, not only honours the victims of the Holocaust but also rejects any kind of Holocaust denial. The resolution also encourages the UN member states to actively preserve sites that the Nazis used during the “Final Solution” like killing centres, concentration camps, and prisons. Final Solution refers to the systematic mass murder of Jews of Europe.

78 years ago today.

From Band of Brothers when they discover a camp. Very disturbing.

 
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hamermill

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In a place far, far away
Photos show the horrors of Auschwitz, the largest and deadliest Nazi concentration camp, 78 years after its liberation
Fri, January 27, 2023 at 5:06 PM EST
view of auschwitz II



An aerial view of the Auschwitz II-Birkenau extermination camp on December 19, 2019 in Oswiecim, Poland.Christopher Furlong/Getty Images


  • It has been 78 years since the Soviet Army liberated Auschwitz, the largest Nazi concentration complex.
  • First established in 1940, Auschwitz had a concentration camp, large gas chambers, and crematoria.
  • More than 1.1 million people were murdered at Auschwitz, including nearly one million Jews.
It was the greatest tragedy of the Holocaust. In just five years, over one million people were murdered at Auschwitz, the largest and deadliest Nazi concentration camp.

Auschwitz was established in 1940 and located in the suburbs of Oswiecim, a Polish city the Germans annexed. Between 1940 and 1945, it grew to include three main camp centers and a slew of subcamps — each of which were used for forced labor, torture, and mass killing.

An estimated 1.3 million people were deported to Auschwitz during its five-year operation, and approximately 1.1 million were killed.

The terror of Auschwitz finally subsided on January 27, 1945, when the Soviet Army liberated the remaining 7,000 prisoners from the camps.

On the 78th anniversary of this liberation, these photos exhibit the horror and history of Auschwitz.

Auschwitz was established in 1940 in the suburbs of Oswiecim, Poland. During its first year, authorities cleared 15 square miles for the camp.

Ariel view of Auschwitz, 2019 (Christopher Furlong:Getty Images)


An aerial view of the Auschwitz II-Birkenau extermination camp on December 19, 2019 in Oswiecim, Poland.Christopher Furlong/Getty Images

Source: The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

Auschwitz I, the first camp to undergo construction, was initially created for three reasons: to imprison enemies, to use forced labor, and to kill certain groups of people.

barracks photo updated size


The crematorium near gas chamber one at the former Nazi death camp of Auschwitz I in Oswiecim, Poland, Sunday, Dec. 8, 2019.Markus Schreiber/AP

Sources: The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Auschwitz‑Birkenau Memorial and State Museum

Construction of the largest camp, Auschwitz II, also called Auschwitz-Birkenau, began in October 1941. Electrified barbed wire divided it into 10 different sections.

Remains of prison barracks (AP Markus Schreiber) size updated


The remains of brick stone chimneys of prisoner barracks can be seen inside the former Nazi death camp of Auschwitz Birkenau or Auschwitz II.Markus Schreiber/AP

Sources: Jewish Virtual Library, The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

Auschwitz-Birkenau's different sections were for "women; men; a family camp for Roma (Gypsies) deported from Germany, Austria, and the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia; and a family camp for Jewish families deported from the Theresienstadt ghetto," according to the Holocaust Memorial Museum.

Women in the barracks


Women in the barracks at Auschwitz, Poland, January 1945.Galerie Bilderwelt/Getty Images

Sources: The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

Inmates were put into poorly structured wooden barracks with 36 bunks each. Five to six prisoners were packed in so over 500 prisoners were in each unit.

Inmates lying on bunks after liberation (Reuters Pictures Archive).JPG


Reuters Pictures Archive

Source: The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

Incoming prisoners who were selected for forced labor received tattoos and had a serial number sewn into their uniforms. Auschwitz was the only concentration camp to do this.

Prisoner tattoo


Auschwitz concentration camp survivor Eva Behar shows her number tattoo in her home on December 1, 2014 in London, United Kingdom.Christopher Furlong/Getty Images

Source: The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

Shortly after construction, Auschwitz-Birkenau became the largest killing center and central location for the extermination of Jews in Europe.

bodies of prisoners shortly after camp was liberated


Bodies of prisoners found in Auschwitz, shortly after liberation in 1945.Reuters

Source: Museum of Jewish Heritage

In 1942, two farmhouses just outside the camp were turned into gas chambers.

Ariel view of gas chambers 2019 (Christopher Furlong:Getty Images)


Christopher Furlong/Getty Images

Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

But as Auschwitz-Birkenau became a central location for mass killing, these gas chambers were too small. Four new chambers were built between March and June 1943, each containing a disrobing area, gas chamber, and crematory ovens.

shoes of the victims of Aushwitz


Shoes of victims exterminated at Auschwitz.Rolf Vennenbernd/picture alliance via Getty Images

Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

As millions of people were murdered, mounds of eye glasses, razors, shoes, and other belongings were left behind.

remains of glasses that belonged to people who were murdered (REUTERS:Pawel Ulatowski).JPG


Remains of glasses from people exterminated at Auschwitz.Pawel Ulatowski/Reuters

In 1942, Auschwitz III, also known as Buna or Monowitz, opened near the town of Monowice to house more forced laborers.

barracks Auschwitz II


An ariel picture taken of Auschwitz barracks taken on December 15, 2019 in Oswiecim, Poland.Pablo GONZALEZ / AFP via Getty Images

Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

Forty-four subcamps with different specializations were established at Auschwitz between 1942 and 1944. The Nazis made prisoners work on large farms, in coal mines, in weapons production — basically anything the German military needed for war.

Women deemed fit to work in Auschwitz


A photo of women deemed fit for work, taken in May 1944 in Auschwitz.AFP via Getty Images

Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

Between 1940 and 1945, an estimated 1.3 million people were sent to Auschwitz. Approximately 1.1 million were killed.

Cadaveres of women and dead children found after liberation resize


Cadavers of women and Children who died in cold weather at Auschwitz.Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images

Source: Museum of Jewish Heritage

In January 1945, before Soviet forces could reach the camps for liberation, nearly 60,000 people were forced to march west, and thousands more were killed.

soviet soldiers with liberated prisons in 1945 (REUTERS:HO AUSCHWITZ MUSEUM).JPG


Soviet soldiers with survivors of Auschwitz in 1945.REUTERS:HO AUSCHWITZ MUSEUM

Source: The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

The terror finally subsided on January 27, 1945, when the Soviet Army reached the gates of Auschwitz.

Soviet soldiers arriving at main gate of Auschwitz during liberation (REUTERS:HO AUSCHWITZ MUSEUM REUTERS).JPG


Soviet soldiers arriving at the gates of Auschwitz in 1945.REUTERS:HO AUSCHWITZ MUSEUM REUTERS

Source: The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

When Soviet soldiers arrived, only between 6,000 and 7,000 prisoners remained. The majority of them faced starvation, illness, and death.

15 year old boy being rescued at Auschwitz


Sovfoto/Universal Images Group/Getty Images

Source: The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

Available records indicate that when the soldiers arrived, at least 700 youth prisoners were still at the camp, half of whom were Jewish.

Children who survived


Children who have lived to be liberated by the Red Army from the Auschwitz concentration camp on January 27, 1945.TASS via Getty Images

Source: Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial Museum

In many cases, the liberated children were malnourished, severely weak, vitamin deficient, and diseased. Of 180 children examined after liberation, 40% had tuberculosis.

Jewish children at Auschwitz


Jewish children, survivors of Auschwitz, with a nurse behind a barbed wire fence, Poland, February 1945.Galerie Bilderwelt/Getty Images

Source: Auschwitz-Birkenau Museum

Immediately after liberation, many of the children were sent to hospitals organized by the Soviet army and the Polish Red Cross.

photo of survivor after liberation (Julian Stratenschulte:picture alliance via Getty Images


Holocaust survivor Rachel Rubin shows a photograph of herself as a 14-year-old girl shortly after her liberation in 1945.Julian Stratenschulte/picture alliance via Getty Images

In 2016, a group of children who survived the horrors of Auschwitz met to take their photo together.

81-year-old Paula Lebovics, 79-year-old Miriam Ziegler, 85-year-old Gabor Hirsch and 80-year-old Eva Kor pose with the original image of them as children taken at Auschwitz at the time of its liberation on January 26, 2015 in Krakow, Poland.Ian Gavan/Getty Images

In total, 6 million Jews were killed during the Holocaust. One-sixth of these exterminations happened at Auschwitz alone.

Photographs are displayed at the Birkenau Museum, December 10, 2004, of the many faces of the men, women and children at the Auschwitz II.Scott Barbour/Getty Images

Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

To commemorate this grave tragedy, world leaders met in Israel in 2020 to mark 75 years since the camp's liberation.

Russia's President Vladimir Putin arrived in Israel on a working visit to attend celebrations marking the 75th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz.Mikhail Metzel/TASS via Getty Images

On January 27, 2023, Holocaust survivors gathered in Oswiecim, Poland, to attend a ceremony marking the 78th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz.


Holocaust survivors wearing striped scarves attend a ceremony during 78th Anniversary Of Auschwitz - Birkenau Liberation and Holocaust Remembrance Day.Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Holocaust survivors and former Auschwitz inmates were joined by world leaders at a wreath-laying and candle ceremony in front of the Death Wall to remember the thousands who died at the former Nazi concentration complex.

The flag of Israel and candles are seen during the 78th Anniversary Of Auschwitz - Birkenau Liberation ceremony and Holocaust Remembrance Day in Brzezinka, Poland, on January 27, 2023.Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Editor's note: This list was first published in January 2020 and has been updated to reflect recent developments.

NOTE: Some photos were deleted so that this article could be posted.


Read the original article on Business Insider
 

boomboom

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The last lock on the gas chamber door. View from the main gate looking into the train shunting area. A very humbling & somber educational tour from 20yrs ago. Plus at the end of the tour a gentleman asked the tour guide to clarify 1 point. When she did, he thanked her for having the correct facts. Rolling up his sleeve, showing her his numbered tattoo. It was his 1st time back since being liberated as a 12yr old boy. It reinforced the magnitude of my visit, as I remember watching this older gent a several times during the tour, as he was always the last to leave an area. I kept an eye out for him to make sure he was OK. Not knowing the pain he must have being reliving in his mind. Another example how we must not let hate destroy us. 20230126_194031.jpg 20230126_193910.jpg
 

CrispyCrunch

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Historian Dan Stones book Holocaust, an Unfinished History explores how the Holocaust was not solely a German project, but a pan-European crime with tens of thousands of active perpetrators all over the continent. From France, to Norway, to Holland, Croatia, Slovakia, Hungary, Poland, Ukraine and Romania. The Germans had no problem finding eager collaborators in all continental European countries. It’s no wonder they’re trying to rewrite history to leave this part out.






 

Frankfooter

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Love how you desperately quote a token Jew while still trying to justify the murder of Jews for simply being Jews.
I don't justify the deaths of anyone of any race, stop with the slander.
You, however, tried to justify using snipers withe exploding bullets on children, with orders to 'kneecap' or cripple them for life.
You justified those shootings and killings. 49 dead kids and 619 crippled.

'Token Jew', is that a new variation on 'self hating'?
You're now going to have to call 25% of US Jews 'token Jews'.

You know what Americans think of people who justify apartheid?
 

basketcase

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I don't justify the deaths of anyone of any race, stop with the slander.
...
Except where you've repeatedly excuses attacks on Jews in the West Bank because you think it should be Jew-free and Gaza rockets are 'self defence'? you're still refusing to admit a guy gunning down people leaving a synagogue was terrorism while also obsessing that militant settlers throwing rocks is.

And I'm sure you're aware that the spiritual leader of the Palestinian movement spent WWII in Berlin working to support the Nazis
 

Frankfooter

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Apr 10, 2015
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Except where you've repeatedly excuses attacks on Jews in the West Bank because you think it should be Jew-free and Gaza rockets are 'self defence'? you're still refusing to admit a guy gunning down people leaving a synagogue was terrorism while also obsessing that militant settlers throwing rocks is.
Prove it.
Post a quote.
I challenge you.

You're lying.

Likely you're just very confused again and forgot that its you that is backing the group that excuses attacks on Palestinians, wants all the land and thinks it should be clear of Palestinains.


 

basketcase

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Prove it.
Post a quote.
I challenge you.
...
Are you back to demanding people prove a negative?

Show me a single post where you admit that the attack on the Jerusalem synagogue was terrorism. You can't and you won't because somehow in your warped identity,. you think that admitting that Palestinian terrorism exists somehow equals being anti-Palestinian.

You also just posted quotes from an anti-semite in another thread and have repeatedly promoted anti-semitic tropes that target Israel and have justified targeting Canadian Jews for protests about Israel

Canada has a clear definition of anti-semitism and you clearly and repeatedly hit most of the characteristics. We all know the only reason you posted in this thread is to try and pretend you're concerned only with getting Israel to improve it's polices when it is clear that you endlessly support Iran's government and groups like Hamas who's overtly stated goal is the elimination of the Jewish presence.

The Palestinian leader and spiritual leader of much of the Palestinian movement was working with the Nazis in WWII, has direct complicity in trying to get Bosnian Muslims to help round up Jews, and brought some fleeing Nazis with him to continue fighting Jews.

The Holocaust was 99.999% a European thing but the same kind of anti-semitism is also deeply embedded in Islam and the Arab world, going back to the Koran and that has played a huge role in both Arab violence against legal Jewish immigrants and the anti-semitic pogroms that drove almost all jews out of the Arab world.

You might be against another Holocaust in Europe but you are really trying to get it to happen in the Middle East.

And just a prediction, your response to being caught out will be to call me Islamophobic because I mentioned that Arabs are not helpless people capable of making bad choices.
 

Frankfooter

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Apr 10, 2015
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Are you back to demanding people prove a negative?

Show me a single post where you admit that the attack on the Jerusalem synagogue was terrorism. You can't and you won't because somehow in your warped identity,. you think that admitting that Palestinian terrorism exists somehow equals being anti-Palestinian.

You also just posted quotes from an anti-semite in another thread and have repeatedly promoted anti-semitic tropes that target Israel and have justified targeting Canadian Jews for protests about Israel

Canada has a clear definition of anti-semitism and you clearly and repeatedly hit most of the characteristics. We all know the only reason you posted in this thread is to try and pretend you're concerned only with getting Israel to improve it's polices when it is clear that you endlessly support Iran's government and groups like Hamas who's overtly stated goal is the elimination of the Jewish presence.

The Palestinian leader and spiritual leader of much of the Palestinian movement was working with the Nazis in WWII, has direct complicity in trying to get Bosnian Muslims to help round up Jews, and brought some fleeing Nazis with him to continue fighting Jews.

The Holocaust was 99.999% a European thing but the same kind of anti-semitism is also deeply embedded in Islam and the Arab world, going back to the Koran and that has played a huge role in both Arab violence against legal Jewish immigrants and the anti-semitic pogroms that drove almost all jews out of the Arab world.

You might be against another Holocaust in Europe but you are really trying to get it to happen in the Middle East.

And just a prediction, your response to being caught out will be to call me Islamophobic because I mentioned that Arabs are not helpless people capable of making bad choices.
You just called the UN rapporteur on Israel an antisemite.
You've called Defence for Children International antisemites.
You've called BDS terrorism.
You call Amnesty antisemites
You call HRW antisemites.

Yet you back a government that has elected a party Canada recognizes as terrorists.

Now you're pushing conspiracy theories about WWII in order to justify apartheid and the Islamaphobia you push repeatedly?
If you're worried about Nazis, you're looking the wrong way.

One third of the world sees policies that look familiar, basketcase.
One third of the world is wondering WTF you are supporting.




 

basketcase

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You just called the UN rapporteur on Israel an antisemite.
...
Yes, people who openly state that Jews subjugated America are anti-semites. But I get why this upsets you. You've repeatedly said the same thing as her and since you can't be racist, she must not be either. All you've been doing lately is just spewing idiocy that is completely contradicted by my posting history.

You are undoubtedly an anti-semite, no matter how much you pretend it's really just a concern about Israeli policy. You don't care about Israel becoming better, you don't care what Palestinians say, do, or want. All you care about is making it hard or impossible for Jews to exist in the middle east which is why it is a complete farce that you post about the Holocaust.


And it is absolutely disgusting that you try to compare convicted criminals lined up at a jail to the intentional genocide of the Holocaust.

Comparing Israel to Nazis is yet another checkmark for you on Canada's definition of anti-semitism.
 

Frankfooter

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Apr 10, 2015
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Yes, people who openly state that Jews subjugated America are anti-semites. But I get why this upsets you. You've repeatedly said the same thing as her and since you can't be racist, she must not be either. All you've been doing lately is just spewing idiocy that is completely contradicted by my posting history.

You are undoubtedly an anti-semite, no matter how much you pretend it's really just a concern about Israeli policy. You don't care about Israel becoming better, you don't care what Palestinians say, do, or want. All you care about is making it hard or impossible for Jews to exist in the middle east which is why it is a complete farce that you post about the Holocaust.


And it is absolutely disgusting that you try to compare convicted criminals lined up at a jail to the intentional genocide of the Holocaust.

Comparing Israel to Nazis is yet another checkmark for you on Canada's definition of anti-semitism.
HRW on the IHRA definition.

Or you could check this:
Jewish faculty in Canada against the adoption of the IHRA Working Definition of Antisemitism

Or you could tell us why its ok that you compared Palestinians to Nazis in your previous post but then its antisemitic for me to post 3 separate polls about Israeli racism and policies that made the same comparison.

Being called a racist by someone who backs apartheid is like trump accusing you of lying.
Its laughable.

You support apartheid, you win the racism debate hands down.
 

basketcase

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HRW on the IHRA definition.
...
Yes, Canada's definition.

The fact that you don't like being labelled as an anti-semite under Canada's definition doesn't make it any less true.

For example, your posting a pic of convicts lined up in a jail in a Holocaust thread fits this criteria.
  • Drawing comparisons of contemporary Israeli policy to that of the Nazis.
It's pretty fucked that in a thread about the Holocaust you're still pushing anti-semitic ideas and justifying attacks from people set on ethnic cleansing of Jews.
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
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Yes, Canada's definition.

The fact that you don't like being labelled as an anti-semite under Canada's definition doesn't make it any less true.

For example, your posting a pic of convicts lined up in a jail in a Holocaust thread fits this criteria.
  • Drawing comparisons of contemporary Israeli policy to that of the Nazis.
It's pretty fucked that in a thread about the Holocaust you're still pushing anti-semitic ideas and justifying attacks from people set on ethnic cleansing of Jews.
By that same definition you are also an antisemite who posts repeatedly that criticizing Israeli policy is antisemitic.

  • Holding Jews collectively responsible for actions of the state of Israel.

Every time you accuse me of antisemitism for criticizing Israeli apartheid, which is a government policy, you are guilty of antisemitism yourself.
 

basketcase

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Dec 29, 2005
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By that same definition you are also an antisemite who posts repeatedly that criticizing Israeli policy is antisemitic.

  • Holding Jews collectively responsible for actions of the state of Israel.

Every time you accuse me of antisemitism for criticizing Israeli apartheid, which is a government policy, you are guilty of antisemitism yourself.
This claim of yours is one of the stupidest things I have ever seen.. Do you actually believe it or is it just something your handlers tell you to use?

Yes, it is racist when you try to hold Jews responsible for Israel. You did that with protests outside a Jewish owned store and you did that about a Canadian Rabbi's comments about our first nations.

It is just like your racist double standard of saying it is terrorism for Israeli troops to fire back at Palestinian gunmen but refuse to say people being gunned down while leaving prayers is.
 
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