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Auschwitz Birkenau Research Paper

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“We suffered from thirst and cold, at every stop we clamored for water…the hours of darkness were nightmares without end.” Primo Levi, a survivor of the Third Reich order to exterminate all those who are deemed unfit to live in Nazi Germany, took a stance. A stronger take on Darwinism, the Holocaust was the name for the genocide of Semitic people such as Primo Levi. He described his time in Auschwitz as “a nightmare without end” which can mean nothing good for the Jewish people who inhabit Germany. Auschwitz was just one of the mass extermination camps Hitler and his SS friend, Heinrich Himmler, oversaw. When the war is over, Auschwitz was responsible for taking the most lives during World War II. Auschwitz-Birkenau is the personification of …show more content…

In Nazi Germany, one can imagine that there were many people who were unhappy with the conditions that were forced among the inhabitants. Since most of the Third Reich land was acquired through force, many people were used to living a particular way for a long period of time, resulting in dissention within the acquired lands. In Poland (a German seized territory), many strongly opposed the Nazi way of life, so Heinrich Himmler instituted the creation of Auschwitz. Located in Oswiecim, Poland, Auschwitz held many Polish prisoners who refused to live like a “true German”, as Hitler described. The camp, however, was not a death camp to begin with according to Geoffrey Wigoder (1996), but simply a prison for unruly citizens in Poland. The camp ran for a year with a majority of Polish-born inhabiting the small camp. In 1941, Heinrich Himmler saw the need for larger housing grounds for political prisoners. He created two sub-camps to go along with the original camp. The once responsible for taking most of the lives at Auschwitz was named Birkenau. Birkenau is known as Auschwitz II and the death camp of Auschwitz. Specific birch trees that grew near Auschwitz were called Birkenau trees, which gave the sub-camp its name. The camp’s expansion was also a direct accommodation of Adolf Hitler’s increasingly perverse beliefs about specific ethnic groups and minorities. “The Final Solution” marked the newer purpose for Auschwitz–a massive extermination camp for the cleansing of the Nazi

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