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Auschwitz 1940 - 1945
  • Language: de
  • Pages: 549

Auschwitz 1940 - 1945

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1999
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  • Publisher: Unknown

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The Fake Prison Doctor of Auschwitz
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 213

The Fake Prison Doctor of Auschwitz

After over half a century of secrecy, a Swiss bank safe was opened, it contained the long-lost research notes of Josef Mengele, as well as those of his chief assistant in Auschwitz. They had been deposited there by the assistant who himself had been a Jewish doctor. Sent to Auschwitz, he was forced to participate in Josef Mengele’s gruesome human experiments. Following the war, he completely disappeared, assuming a new identity and shrouding himself in silence. He did write his story down, but ordered the documents to be sealed away until decades after his death. With the release date drawing closer, his granddaughter, a well-connected Vatican doctor, wanted to have the documents examined b...

The Dentist of Auschwitz
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 250

The Dentist of Auschwitz

" In 1941 Berek Jakubowicz (now Benjamin Jacobs) was deported from his Polish village and remained a prisoner of the Reich until the final days of the war. His possession of a few dental tools and rudimentary skills saved his life. Jacobs helped assemble V1 and V2 rockets in Buchenwald and Dora-Mittelbau; spent a year and a half in Auschwitz, where he was forced to remove gold teeth from corpses; and survived the RAF attack on three ocean liners turned prison camps in the Bay of Lubeck. This is his story.

Państwowe Muzeum Auschwitz-Birkenau w Oświęcimiu
  • Language: pl
One Family
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 343

One Family

One Family: Before, During, and After the Holocaust, Third Edition, written by the son of a survivor, revisits and expands the author’s research on his relatives while they lived in Poland, France, Denmark and the U.S. Kolin draws on newly available secondary and archival sources, successfully providing readers with a dynamic portrait of this one family as a microcosm of what happened to families throughout Europe during the Holocaust. He explores the identities of his relatives not only as Jews, but also as workers in specific sectors, from the slaughterhouses of Warsaw to the leather workers and pocketbook makers of Paris. He traces the political and military experiences of family members and how each family wrestled with the decision of whether or not to emigrate and whether or not to be politically active. The author describes how his relatives responded to, and coped with, the unfolding of anti-Jewish measures in Poland and France. He then traces how that response, whether it was flight and/or resistance, affected their ultimate fate.

Anatomy of the Auschwitz Death Camp
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 660

Anatomy of the Auschwitz Death Camp

An authoritative account of the operation of the Auschwitz death camp.Ò. . . a comprehensive work that is unlikely to be overtaken for many years. This learnedvolume is about as chilling as historiography gets.Ó ÑWalter Laqueur, The New RepublicÒ. . . a vital contribution to Holocaust studies and a bulwark against forgetting.Ó ÑPublishers WeeklyÒRigorously documented, brilliantly written, organized, and edited . . . the most authoritativebook about a place of unsurpassed importance in human history.Ó ÑJohn K. RothÒNever before has knowledge concerning every aspect of Auschwitz . . . been made available in such authority, depth, and comprehensiveness.Ó ÑRichard L. RubensteinLeadin...

People in Auschwitz
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 566

People in Auschwitz

Hermann Langbein was allowed to know and see extraordinary things forbidden to other Auschwitz inmates. Interned at Auschwitz in 1942 and classified as a non-Jewish political prisoner, he was assigned as clerk to the chief SS physician of the extermination camp complex, which gave him access to documents, conversations, and actions that would have remained unknown to history were it not for his witness and his subsequent research. Also a member of the Auschwitz resistance, Langbein sometimes found himself in a position to influence events, though at his peril. People in Auschwitz is very different from other works on the most infamous of Nazi annihilation centers. Langbein's account is a scrupulously scholarly achievement intertwining his own experiences with quotations from other inmates, SS guards and administrators, civilian industry and military personnel, and official documents. Whether his recounting deals with captors or inmates, Langbein analyzes the events and their context objectively, in an unemotional style, rendering a narrative that is unique in the history of the Holocaust. This monumental book helps us comprehend what has so tenaciously challenged understanding.

The Crime of My Very Existence
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 355

The Crime of My Very Existence

The Crime of My Very Existence investigates a rarely considered yet critical dimension of anti-Semitism that was instrumental in the conception and perpetration of the Holocaust: the association of Jews with criminality. Drawing from a rich body of documentary evidence, including memoirs and little-studied photographs, Michael Berkowitz traces the myths and realities pertinent to the discourse on "Jewish criminality" from the eighteenth century through the Weimar Republic, into the complex Nazi assault on the Jews, and extending into postwar Europe.

Values and Violence in Auschwitz
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 212

Values and Violence in Auschwitz

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»Lagermedizin« in Auschwitz
  • Language: de
  • Pages: 1067

»Lagermedizin« in Auschwitz

Dieser Ort werde die Hölle auf Erden sein, erklärte im Juni 1940 ein SS-Angehöriger Häftlingen, die beim Bau des Lagerzauns eingesetzt waren. Nach 1945 ist Auschwitz zum Synonym für die unvorstellbaren Grauen des Holocaust geworden. Unter den Häftlingen waren alle Berufsgruppen vertreten, auch Ärztinnen und Ärzte. Wer eine Beschäftigung im Krankenbau fand, steigerte seine Überlebenschancen deutlich, konnte aber auch sein medizinisches Wissen einsetzen, um anderen zu helfen. Als Auschwitz 1942 zum Vernichtungskomplex ausgebaut wurde, ging die Behandlung der kranken Insassen praktisch in die Hände der Häftlingsärzte über, auch wenn SS-Mediziner die Aufsicht ausübten. Die Koopera...