As you scroll left the SS orderly room on the Birkenau Ramp comes into view.
Immediately after disembarking from the trains, the Jews, and others, were made to line up in two columns: women and children in one, and men in the other.
The State Museum Of Auschwitz-Birkenau & Remember.Org Present
As you scroll left the SS orderly room on the Birkenau Ramp comes into view.
Immediately after disembarking from the trains, the Jews, and others, were made to line up in two columns: women and children in one, and men in the other.
The virtual tour opens to view of a brick building – in use to delouse prisoner’s uniforms as louse-born diseases ran rampant.
On the right is the “Mittelstrasse” road that runs the entire width of the camp.
Continuing to scroll left you come to the women’s camp, BIa to the right of the ramp. and then the camp entrance.
All one need do to glimpse the scope and vastness of the Nazi plan for extermination is stand at this spot and look round in all directions.
Scroll to the left and notice the vast expanse of the BII with its many sub-camps, first BIIf,e,d, the other part of the Mittelstrasse, and then BIIc,b,a (see map).
BII – including 7 separate camps – those for men, women, and two “family camps”.
A bit further on to the far end of the ramp are ruins of Krematorium II, the Memorial and Krematorium III which are all hard to view here.
Along its length, the road to the left leading to the two largest gas chambers and crematoria in any camp, KII, KIII.
As you scroll left the SS orderly room on the Ramp comes into view.
Immediately after disembarking from the trains, the Jews, and others, lined up in two columns: women and children in one, and men in the other.
Next, SS physicians separate the strong and healthy people from the elderly, the sick, pregnant women, and children.
Those fit for labor are sent to the camp. The others, usually 70-75% of each transport, sent to their deaths in the gas chambers.
All photos and videos are Copyright Alan Jacobs and Remember.org.
Remember.org helps people find the best digital resources, connecting them through a collaborative learning structure since 1994.
If you'd like to share your story on Remember.org, all we ask is that you give permission to students and teachers to use the materials in a non-commercial setting.
Founded April 25, 1995 as a "Cybrary of the Holocaust".
THANKS FOR THE SUPPORT
.
History Channel
ABC
PBS
CNET
One World Live
New York Times
Apple
Adobe
Copyright 1995-2024 Remember.org.
All Rights Reserved.
Publisher: Dunn Simply
APA Citation
Dunn, M. D. (Ed.). (95, April 25). Remember.org - The Holocaust History - A People's and Survivors' History. Retrieved February 28, 2022, from remember.org
MLA Citation
Remember.org - The Holocaust History - A People's and Survivors' History. Edited by Michael Declan Dunn, 25 Apr. 95AD, remember.org. Accessed 28 Feb. 2022. Remember.org shares art, discussion, photos, poems, and facts to preserve powerful memories