THE HISTORY OF HITLER AND DEATH CAMPS
When we think of Nazi evil,we think of Auschwitz: the
deadliest Nazi camp and the deadliest Holocaust site.But there was more to the
history of the camps and the Holocaust than Auschwitz.
The SS operated over 25 concentration camps during the Nazi
dictatorship (1933-45), and over 1100 attached satellite camps.These camps did
not all operate at the same time,however.The SS system changed all the time,
and so did the prisoner population,the conditions and the buildings.
There was no typical
concetration camp
The history of the camps begins in 1933,seven years before
Auschwtz was even set up.In the wake of Great Depression.German democracy(the
Wimar Republic) was destroyed.Its place was taken by the Nazi dictatorship,led
by Adolf Hitler.Although the Nazi party had lots of popular support-it gained
almost 44 per cent of the vote in the last multiparty elections in March
1933-millions of Germans still rejected it.
The new rulers brutally attacked real and imagined opponents.Many victims were taken to
early camps in 1933,most inmates were political prisoners,above all German
Communists.Many faced abuse and violence.Deaths were still rare,however,and
most prisoners were released after a few weeks or months.Fear of the camps
helped to break the anti-Nazi resistance.As a result, fewer opponents ended up
inside, and by October 1934 only 2,400 prisoners were left in concentration
camps.Some observers thought the camps
would disappear completely.
But Adolf Hitler wanted to keep the camps:
he saw the benefits of lawless terror,without courts and
judges And so Hitler supported the creation of a permanent concentration camp system under SS leader
Heinrich Himmler.When war broke out in autumn 1939,after the German invasion of
Poland,this SS system included six purpose-built camps holding 21,400
prisoners.
During the Second World war,concentration camps spread
through much of Nazi-occupied Europe.Auschwitz, set up in 1940 to crush the
polish resistance,was the first of many new camps.conditons inside camps,
always poor,now became deadly.Many inmates died from illness and
starvation.many more were executed or died during horrific medical experiments.
From 1942,the camps participated in the Holocaust.most of
the six million European Jews murdered by the Nazis died outside concentration
camps,shot or gassed on the killing fields
of eastern Europe.Still, the single most lethal site of the Holocaust
was a concentration camp: Auschwitz Here, the SS killed some one millions Jews;
most were murdered on arrival in gas chambers.
In Auschwitz and other concentration camps,prisoner numbers
grew fast during the second half of the war.Those regarded as fit for work by
the SS(Jews and non-Jews alike) were used as slave labourers.Prisoners toiled
for many hours each day,building roads,digging tunnels,breaking rocks, and
more.Inmate numbers reached over 700,000 in early 1945.By then,the SS held most prisoners in satellite camps,which had
sprung up near factories and building
sites.
The end came in the first months of 1945,when Allied troops conquered what was
left of the Third Reich .But liberation came too late for many concentration
camp inmates.Between January and May 1945 (when Germany capitulated), an
estimated 300,000 prisoners died.Victims of disease,starvation and
execution,they died inside the hellish compounds and on death marches away from
abandoned camps.
Overall,some 2.3 million men,women and Children were taken
to concentration camps between 1933 and 1945.Their fate was shaped by many factors,such
as age,gender and nationality.There were many different prisoners(from Germany
and abdroad),homosexuals,criminals,Gypsies,soviet POWs and Jehovah’s
witness.They all experienced the camps differently.
Inmate relations were often tense,but there was also much
comradeship and resistance.
The SS ruled the concentration camps with an iron fist.It
enforced brutal rules and rigid schedules.But just as there was no typical camp
and no typical prisoner,there was no typical perpetrator either.By no means all
men and women in the Camp SS were depraved murderers.But most of them quickly
got used to the abuse of prisoners and upheld SS terror to the end.
Liberation was no happy end.Most prisoners had died before
the Allies arrived.And the camps left a bitter legacy for survivors.They
suffered from injuries and haunting memories,while most perpetrators got away
unpunished.Meanwhile, ordinary Germans often pleaded ignorance.They did not
know about the SS crimes,they said.This was one about the SS crimes,they said.This
was one of many lies about the camps. After all,the camps had been public
knowledge during the Third Reich.To combat such lies, and to learn lessons from
the camps,we need to understand their complex history.
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