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THE BATTLES OF THE HOLOCAUST

The Battles of the Holocaust 
The Holocaust is the most horrifying crime against humanity of all times. Hitler, in an
attempt to establish the pure Aryan race, decided that all mentally ill, gypsies, non
supporters of Nazism, and Jews were to be eliminated from the German population. He
proceeded to reach his goal in a systematic scheme. One of his main methods of doing away
with these undesirables was through the use of concentration camps. In January 1941, in a
meeting with his top officials, the 'final solution' was decided. The Jewish population
was to be eliminated. In this paper I will discuss concentration camps with a detailed
description of the worst one prior to World War II, Buchenwald. 
The first concentration camps were set up in 1933. In the early days of Hitler's regime,
concentration camps were places that held people in protective custody. Victims for
protective custody included those who were either physically or mentally ill, gypsies,
homosexuals, Jehovah Witnesses, Jews and anyone against the Nazi regime. Gypsies were
classified as people with at least two gypsy great grandparents. 
By the end of 1933 there were at least fifty concentration camps throughout occupied
Europe. At first, the camps were controlled by the Gestapo (police), but by 1934 the SS,
Hitler's personal security force, were ordered, by Hitler, to control the camps. 
Camps were set up for several different purposes. Some for forced labor, others for
medical experiments and, later on, for death/extermination. Transition camps were set up
as holding places for death camps.
Henrick Himmler, chief of the German police, the Gestapo, thought that the camps would
provide an economic base for the soldiers. This did not happen. The work force was poorly
organized and working conditions were inhumane. Therefore, productivity was minimal.
Camps were set up along railroad lines, so that the prisoners would be conveniently close
to their destination. As they were being transported, the soldiers kept telling the Jews
to have hope. When the camps were finally opened, most of the families who were shipped
out together ended up being separated. Often, the transports mirrored what went on in the
camps; cruelty by the officers, near starvation of those being transported, fetid and
unsanitary conditions on the trains. On the trains, Jews were starved of food and water
for days. Many people did not survive the ride to arrive at the camp. 
Jews were forced to obey the guards' orders from the moment they arrived at the camps. If
they didn't, they would be beaten, put into solitary confinement or shot. Prisoners
usually had marks on their clothes or numbers on their arms to identify them. 
The sanitary conditions of the camps were horrible. There was only one bathroom for four
hundred people. They had to stand for hours in snow, rain, heat, or cold for roll call,
which was twice a day. Within the first few days of being at the camps, thousands of
people died of hunger, starvation and disease. Other people died from the cruel
punishments of the guards; beatings and torture. Typhus, a disease caused by germs
carried by flies, was the main disease that spread throughout the camps. Even when people
were sick, they still continued working because they did not see that sickness meant
death. 
In 1937, 7,000 Jews were in camps. By 1938, 10,000 more Jews were sent to camps. Jews
were taken to camps if they expressed negative feelings about the government, if they
married a non-Jew, if they were sick (mentally or physically), or if they had a police
record. 
When someone escaped from the camp, all the prisoners in that group were shot. Nazis, who
claimed that they did not necessarily hate Jews, but wanted to preserve the Aryan race,
seemed to enjoy making the Jews suffer. They rationalized that slavery was better than
killing their prisoners. Gold fillings, wedding bands, jewelry, shoes and clothing were
taken from the prisoners when they first entered the camps and these items were then
sold. 
Surrounding some of the camps in Poland was a forest, that the Jews who planned to escape
would flee into. Before the escaped prisoners got very far, they were usually killed.
When the Germans caught a Jew planning a rebellion, and the Jew refused to name his/her
associates, the Germans would bring everyone from his/her barracks out and force him/her
to watch the Germans mutilate the others. People who could not run away from the camps
were often able to survive because they dreamt about revolt. 
Special areas of a camp were set aside for medical experiments. Doctors in one medical
unit performed experiments in sterilization. He injected a substance into women's ovaries
to sterilize them. The injection resulted in temperature and inflammation of the ovaries.

Joseph Mengels, one of the most notorious Nazi doctors, hummed opera tunes when
selecting, among the new arrivals, the victims for the gas chambers or medical
experiments. His women victims for sterilization were usually 20-30 years of age. Other
experiments included putting inmates into high pressure chambers to test the effects of
altitude on pilots. Some inmates were frozen in order to determine the best way to revive
frozen German soldiers. 
The first death camp, Chelmno, was set up in Poland on December 8, 1941. This was five
weeks before the Wannsee Conference at which time the 'final solution' was planned out.
Usually, the death camps were part of existing camps, but some new ones were just set up
for the purpose of extermination. When the prisoners first arrived at the camps, those
sent to the left were transferred to death camps. When Jews entered the death camps,
their suitcases, baby bottles, shawls, and eyeglasses were taken and were sold.
Once in the death camps the prisoners were again divided. Women were sent to one side to
have their hair shaven and the men to the other. They were all sent to the showers, naked
with a bar of soap, so as to deceive them into believing that they were truly going into
a shower. Most people smelled the burning bodies and knew the truth.  
There were six true death camps; Chelmno, Treblinka, Auschwitz (Birkenau), Sobibor,
Maidanek, and Belzec. These camps used gas from shower heads to murder their victims. A
seventh death camp, Mauthausen, used a method called extermination through labor. Most
would not consider Buchenwald as a death camp because it had no gas chamber, but it did
have special rooms for mass shootings in which hundreds of prisoners died in every day. 
Buchenwald, located in Poland, was built on the site of Mt. Ettersberg, near Weimar. The
camp, surrounded by walls and barbed wire, was encircled with guard towers at spaced
intervals. Buchenwald was actually a series of internal subcamps with wooden and stone
barracks, old horse stables, and tent cities. The little camp, built beyond the roll call
area, acquired the worst reputation. In one part of it the SS set aside primitive
barracks for emergency needs, crowding 40,000 inmates into them. In another part, the SS
forced the inmates to buy their food, and if they couldn't they would die. 
In July 1937, the Nazis began building Buchenwald. It officially opened on July 19, 1937.
The first commander of Buchenwald was Karl Koch. He headed it until he was relocated in
Majdanek. The first inmates there were professional criminals. After the criminals,
political prisoners were sent there. These politicals were favored over the rest of the
prisoners. On arrival, prisoners were asked their status. If they responded political,
they were supplied with better boots and warmer clothes. These small items were essential
for the prisoners' physical and mental shape. They also received the highest positions
available for prisoners. The first whole Jewish transport was composed of politicals.
They arrived in June 1938 because of an action against asocial Jews.
In the summer of 1938, 2,200 Austrian Jews were transferred from Dachau. Later that year,
arrests after Kristallnacht more than doubled the amount of Jewish prisoners in
Buchenwald. The newly arrived 10,000 Jews lived in recently built huts, and suffered far
more than the non-Jews. Of the new-comers, 244 died in their first month of imprisonment.
By spring 1939, most of the prisoners were released, deprived of their property and
compelled to leave Germany.
The vast majority of the thousands of prisoners died at Buchenwald each year died, soon
after their arrival. They usually died of exhaustion, physical and psychological or due
to their loss of desire to live. Their lives before the camp didn't prepare them for this
type of exhaustion. A survivor of Buchenwald said, It took a long time for a mind, torn
from the anchorages of the outside world and thrust into life-and-death turmoil, to find
a new inward center of gravity. 
The German soldiers were always especially cruel, mentally and physically, to the Jewish
prisoners. At that time, the Germans considered Jewish human life not equal the worth of
an animal. Mentally, they would try to depress the morale of the prisoners, preventing
the development of fellow-feeling or cooperation among the victims. The politically
backward individualists knew nothing of organized action so they couldn't survive long in
Buchenwald. If hunger so demoralized a person to steal another man's bread, he wasn't
reported to the SS. The room attendants took care of him, and if he didn't die from
beating, they injured him so brutally that he was only fit for the crematorium. This was
done to maintain morale and mutual trust. Some men used the typhus wards, which the SS
would not go near, to hide men whose names had come up on the death lists.
The Nazis physically abused the prisoners in many ways. Next to the shooting chambers,
where hundreds died daily, there was a crematorium. Aside from the huge ovens, there were
48 hooks for hanging pairs of prisoners at a time. If they were not dead in the set five
minutes, they would be clubbed to dead and then thrown into the incinerator. The
bathrooms prisoners used were 20 feet long, 12 feet wide, 12 feet deep open pits with
railings along the side to squat. The soldiers would throw people in the hole while they
were doing their business. In October 1937 alone, ten people suffocated from excrement
when thrown into a hole. These overflowing pits were emptied at night by prisoners with
nothing but small pails. There were about 30 men working on the slippery ground and often
as many as ten men fell in. Until the work was done and the pits were empty, the workers
weren't allowed to remove the corpses. In December 1942, the camp received German
criminals who had been handed over to the SS by the prison authorities. Most of them
became the victims of pseudo-medical experiments performed in the camp hospital. In
Buchenwald, the winter Appels, or roll calls can be considered a form of extermination.
Some dropped dead, during roll call, from the freezing cold while others caught pneumonia
and then died.
With so many killings in Buchenwald it might be asked why is it not considered a death
camp ? One suggested response is that killings constantly went on in a quick orderly
fashion at the camps officially known as death camps, with victims not knowing what hit
them. At Buchenwald, though, realizing that death itself is not necessarily terrifying,
but it is years of daily torture which is most frightening and very effective. Therefore,
Buchenwald is called the camp of the slow death. 
The outbreak of World War II brought a new group of prisoners, mostly stateless people
from Poland. More and more prisoners arrived as Hitler's armies conquered more territory.
Most Soviet POW's (prisoners of war) were killed upon arrival. After Koch left for
Majdanek, his successor, Hermann Pister, remained the commander until liberation. In
1942, Buchenwald became a forced labor camp for war weaponry production. This brought in
many more workers. On October 17, 1942 all Jewish prisoners except 200 building masons
were transferred to Auschwitz. Until 1943, prisoners were mostly Germans. Due to the
changing circumstances of the war, men of all nations were imprisoned; politicals,
communists, and Jews from these varied countries outnumbered criminals. Even though many
people from many nations were imprisoned in Buchenwald, the Nazis segregated the lows,
which were the Jews and Homosexuals.
On October 6, 1944 the number of prisoners reached a peak of 89,143. This increase of
numbers diminished the food supplies, further deteriorated the unhygienic conditions,
which in turn increased the death rate. From the winter of 1944 until after January 1945,
the camps in the east were evacuated due to the approach of the Soviet Army and thousands
of prisoners were transferred to Buchenwald. Many of these died in great numbers in
Buchenwald. At the beginning of April 1944, the SS evacuated several thousand Jews. On
January 1945, tens of thousands of ex-Auschwitz inmates were sent to Buchenwald. Between
May 1944 and March 1945, 20,000 Jews were interned in Buchenwald.
A survivor said that the men in Buchenwald, gradually realized that obedience meant
death. The only hope of survival lay in resistance. In Buchenwald, there was a firmly
established underground where, by the end of the war, the political prisoners ran
internal camp affairs completely. The underground made contact with the Allies, resulting
in a bombing raid which severely damaged SS sectors of the camp. It was on this raid on
August 24, 1944 that the underground began to arm itself. This was the foundation of the
take-over of Buchenwald. The mass evacuation planned for April 5, 1945 was foiled. The
armed underground movement strengthened themselves and when the American troops arrived
on April 11, 1945, the underground was in control and handed the camp over to the
Americans.
Of the 238,380 (or 238,980) prisoners held in the camp since it opened, 56,549 (or
56,545) had died or been murdered. 
The Nazis, under Hitler, organized the destruction of the Jews. Why they did it is
unknown. Perhaps it was because of a history of tension between Christians and Jews, or
perhaps, because Hitler needed a scapegoat for Germany's problems.
People throughout history have been murdered; but never as many people as during the
Holocaust, in such a short period of time and under such well organized circumstances.
One third of all the Jews in the world were eliminated. The estimated total is somewhere
around six million. This number included Jews from all over Europe. There are estimates
that over three million non-Jews were murdered. 
Hitler's method of killing the Jews and other undesirable people was first by torture and
then by methodical murder. In the early days of his administration, he took away their
rights as citizens and then as people. They were treated like slaves and lived like
animals. After 1942, his goal was to exterminate all Jewish and unpure people. Many Jews
were killed before that date, but they were a small number compared to the mass murdering
of the Holocaust afterwards.
We Must Never Forget are words which each Jew must remember. It is only through an
organized program of education that we can be sure that people will not forget, and so we
might, in this way, prevent another holocaust from occurring. With ongoing programs about
the Holocaust and the establishment of Holocaust departments in schools and Holocaust
museums we are also letting the entire world know and remember that millions of our loved
ones were lost in the horrible tragic killing that we call the holocaust.?
Works Cited 
Bauer, Yehuda. A History of the Holocaust. New York: Franklin Watts, 1982.
Buchenwald, Encyclopedia Judaica. 1972 ed., Keter Publishers.
Des Pres, Terrence. The Survivor- An Anatomy of Life in the Death Camps. New York:
Oxford University Press, 1976. 
Feig, Konnilyn G. Hitler's Death Camps - The Sanity of Madness. New York: Holmes & Meier
Publishers, 1979.
Gilbert, Martin. The Holocaust - A History of the Jews of Europe During the Second World
War. New York: Holt, Reinhardt & Winston, 1985.
Meltzer, Milton. Never to Forget the Jews of the Holocaust. New York: Harper & Row,
1976.
Rossel, Seymour. The Holocaust. New York: Franklin Watts, 1981 U.S. Congressmen at Death
Camp The Associated Press.April 22, 1945.
Weinstock, Eugene. Beyond the Last Path. New York:Boni and Gaer, 1947.

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