Growing up as a kid Gunter lived with his adoptive parents.At 6 months old, his adoptive parents adopted him because his real parent had died in a major car accident prior to his adoption.Gunter was adopted July 7, 1910, and grew up in Berlin, Germany.He lived there until he was 15 then moved to Oswiecim, Poland in 1925.Both of his adoptive parents were of Jewish descent.While growing up his parents often beat him.Due to his parents beating him he began to hate and blame everything on jews.On April 4, 1925, the S.S. was created, and Gunter joined 14 years later in 1939.While in the S.S. Gunter met Officer Ralf. “Good day Officer how are you?” he asked. “I am fine and you Private.”Officer Ralf asked. “I am also well so when is the construction of the concentration camps going to happen?” he asked. “They are already under construction my comrade.” said Ralf. …show more content…
leaders, stated that one thousand prisoners must be killed a day in order to make more room for the incoming prisoners.While escorting the prisoners to the gas chambers a huge riot broke out in the crowd of the
During the Holocaust Hitler used guns but in time he included gas chambers because they were more efficient and had a quicker impact on killing the Jews. The rivers and streams ran red with blood where the shooting had taken place. The living conditions for the Jews, were unbelievable, Germans began transporting Jews and others to the concentration camps and death camps in Poland. The first gassing was on the 17 march 1942, the death of the people inside the chambers occurred just after a few minutes as the result of internal suffocation caused by the gas. In order to ensure that no one remained alive, the gas chamber was not opened until half an hour had elapsed. The concentration camps provided an ideal location for executions, The concentration camps were
Auschwitz was one of the largest and first concentration camp during WW2 and next to Auschwitz were two other death camps that were named Auschwitz ll and lll. At Auschwitz, there was a total of 8 gas chambers and 4 of them can hold up to 2,000 prisoners (Mostly Jews) at a time. There were 11 million people murdered in the Holocaust and it estimated that 6 million Jews were killed and one in six was killed at Auschwitz.
"What have you come here for, you sons of bitches?have hanged yourselves rather than come here. Didn't you know what was in store for you at Auschwitz? Haven’t you heard about it? In 1944?'" (20)
I know that you are extremely busy with month end, although I will only have a resource to assist us next week for refresher training which I need to book certain timing with him.
By autumn 1941, the SS and police established gas vans (“USHMC, 1999”). They pumped poisonous carbon monoxide gas into small spaces, killing anything within its reach. On July 17th of 1941, Hitler told SS Chief Heinrich Himmler it was his responsibility to take care of all the security in the Soviet Reunion. One of the things Heinrich had to do was to get rid of any threats to the German rule. On July 31, 1941, the Nazi leader Hermann Goering told General Reinhard Heydrich to make the preparations for the execution.
Though the gas chamber method of killing people was most destructive and very efficient, many other tactics were used to slaughter unfortunate prisoners. One Auschwitz survivor said, "One night we were awakened by terrifying cries... on the preceding day, the gas
Nine years after Dachau opened, the crematorium area was located beside the main camp. The old crematorium and the new crematorium was included. There was also a gas chamber, however there isn’t any credible evidence that the gas chamber in Barrack X was used to murder human beings. The gas chambers were actually for something called “selection”. Selection was when all of the Jews at the camp would go to the gas chambers to be evaluated. If a Jew was marked down as not strong enough to do work or too sick then they were sent to the Hartheim "euthanasia" killing center near Linz, Austria. Many Jewish people were killed this way. The crematoria are was also where the SS camp guards would kill prisoners; they would also kill the prisoners at the firing range. Another way that the Jewish People and prisoners were killed at Dachau was when German physicians would do medical experiment on the prisoners “including high-altitude experiments using a decompression chamber, malaria and tuberculosis experiments, hypothermia experiments, and experiments testing new medications. Prisoners were also forced to test methods of making seawater potable and of halting excessive bleeding” ("Dachau"). During this process there were hundreds of prisoners left dead, or with permanent disabilities. During World War II all of the Jews were forced to do work “Prisoners were forced to do this work, starting with the
Gas Chambers were ways to kill prisoners during world war
The conditions of the camp were unbearable. The prisoners were barely fed, mainly bread and water, and were cramped in small sleeping arrangements. "Hundreds slept in triple-tiered rows of bunks (Adler 51)." In the quarters that they stayed, there were no adequate cleaning facilities or restrooms for the prisoners. They rarely were able to change clothes which meant the "clothes were always infested with lice (Swiebocka 18)." Those were sick went to the infirmary where also there were eventually killed in the gas chambers or a lethal injection. The Germans did not want to have anyone not capable of hard work to live. Prisoners were also harshly punished for small things such as taking food or "relieving themselves during work hours (Swiebocka 19)." The biggest punishment was execution. The most common punishment was to receive lashings with a whip.
Born in Torun Poland on January 1st, 1925, Stefan spent most of his early years with his family, including two brothers and two sisters. Stefan recounted Torun being home to many Jews and Germans alike, so much so that he picked up some German at a young age. Stefan remembers vividly in the interview why; his parents would often have
Death during the Holocaust started with apportioning Jews into the ghettos. Many people died in the ghettos from poor living conditions that caused disease or being shot. Others were sent to concentration camps or killing centers. The first killing center was Chelmno, built in 1941, where at least 320,000 people were killed. At Chelmno and many other camps like it, people were immediately gassed in a mobile van if they were not chosen to be placed in a small work group. The largest camp was Auschwitz-Birkenau, where 1.1 million people died. This camp was equipped to kill up to 20,000 people per day. Most people died at the camps in gas chambers. The commandants at the different camps were responsible for constantly torturing the prisoners,
The third phase of the holocaust was known as the final stage. In 1942 at a meeting held in Wannsee Poland, Hitler’s top officials agreed to begin a new phase of the mass murder of Jews. In addition to mass slaughter and starvation they would add a third method of killing. This third method was committing murder by poisonous gas. As deadly as overwork, starvation, beatings, and bullets were, they did not kill fast enough to satisfy the Nazis. The Germans built six death camps in Poland. The first, Chelmno began operating in 1941, before the meeting at Wannsee. Each camp had several large gas chambers in which as many as 12,000 people could be killed a day. Auschwitz was the largest of the death camps. The Jews were told to undress because they would be taking a shower. They
Inmates resembled skeletons and were so weak they were unable to move. The smell of burning bodies was ever present and piles of corpses were scattered around the camp. However, you could be “saved” from the crematoria to be used as test subjects to cruel experimentation and used as lab rats for any experiment the scientists wanted to conduct. Later in the war, extermination camps were built. These were specialized for the mass murder of Jews using Zyklon B to ensure a painful, long, and torturous death. The bodies would then be thrown into the fire and all clothes, teeth, and shoes would be sent to pursue the German war front. At max efficiency, 20,000 people would be killed in the gas chambers a day. As the red Army approached near to liberate the Jews in concentration and extermination camps, SS officers sent prisoners on a death march across hundreds of miles, where they ran with no food or water, no matter the weather, until they reached the closest camp. SS officers proceeded to blow up the camps to hide the genocide from the
Back in 1941, concentration camps main method of mass killing was shooting. Hoss wanted to find a way that was more efficient and less taxing on his workers (Laqueur and Tydor 35,36). On a day when Hoss was absent, his deputy, Karl Fritzch, poisoned a group of prisoners with hydrogen cyanide. After the success of the first try, another gassing was done while Hoss was present. The gassing was again successful (Laqueur and Tydor 36). Gassing became the standard death method for most concentration camps because it was almost painless for the prisoners and put less stress on the workers of the camp. In February 1942, the first gassing of the
He had the will to fight against other men from the same country. At the age of 18, Erich Schmidt and his family moved to Stuttgart, Germany in 1939. In the summer of 1939, he enlisted in the SS. This was called Volksdeutsche which means “people of race’’ in German. In 1940, He shipped out in April 9th, 1940 to Denmark, From their he went to Norway and there he was sent off to Greece. He would later fight in Russia.