Our tour guide, George, gave us a very informative and interesting tour of Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp Memorial and Museum. This was a labor camp where many died from starvation and laboring. However, executions were also carried out here. For more information on this memorial, as well as others in the area, go to www.gedenkstaette-sachsenhausen.de
This building was used to train SS men. Now used for police academy training.
The entrance to the concentration camp. The time on the clock is painted-on and depicts the time of camp liberation.
On the gate of the entrance building. Translated literally as work makes free. That freedom being death.
The field where inmate barracks stood.
A replica of the security system.
Toilets and bathing area in one of the reconstructed barracks.
Dining area and, in the background, bunks, in the reconstructed barracks.
Guard tower in "Small Camp", which was added in 1938 for Jewish prisoners before they were transported to Auschwitz in 1942.
Gestapo prison in background with the footprint of prison cells in foreground.
Inside the Gestapo prison.
Torture area used by Gestapo and SS.
Memorial to communists killed by the Nazis, erected in 1961 by the GDR.
Execution trench (below) and storage area for bodies of those executed (above).
Pictures of communist soldiers executed at Sachsenhausen. Taken just before they were executed...unbeknownst to them.
This area was termed Station Z, as it was the last stop for prisoners. They were executed in the area seen below, and then cremated.
Crematorium ovens below.
Memorials in the execution area.
Infirmary barracks (above) and autopsy table in the pathology building (below).
This was a very thought-provoking and exhausting day, but I think we all appreciated learning the history and seeing it first-hand. I found it ironic that is was such a beautiful day and yet, I could only picture the atrocities carried out here. I imagined what it would have been like on a day like this, for prisoners whose freedom had been taken away, and whose lives would very likely be taken from them. Could they enjoy the sunshine and the sound of the birds?
Here is a good overall history and description of the camp that I found online:
R. Sujatha visits the first concentration camp built in Germany, where, today, black pebbles and dry wreaths are the only record of numerous nameless prisoners who died there.
On a pleasant Saturday morning late-September, I set out
to Potsdamer Platz, one of the busiest cross-sections in Berlin.
Potsdamer Platz was completely destroyed during World War II and then
rebuilt. The weathermen had forecast cloudy skies and some showers which
meant warm clothes. Every time the sun played peek-a-boo it became
chilly.
The plan was to visit Sachsenhausen
concentration camp, around 30 km north of Berlin. For an ordinary
tourist in a city full of museums, it does not make sense to have the
camp on the itinerary. “You need at least 10 days to visit the museums
alone,” said a friend.
A visit to the camp is offered
as a private tour by a few persons only. The tour I took lasts around
six hours, including the half-hour train journey from Berlin to
Oreinenburg, the small picturesque town at the end of which is the camp.
The green-brown landscape brings to memory a scene from the film
Schindler’s List
in which a little boy runs his forefinger across his throat as a signal
to the trainload of women and children who are unaware that they are
being transported to an extermination camp.
Oreinenburg
station has just one platform on either side of which runs a pair of
rails. A flight of stairs leads to the road, with a school and a post
office at the entrance to the station. Oreinenburg is a small, quiet
town with neatly laid row houses and apartment complexes. The town has
beautiful homes with flower gardens and in apartment complexes residents
have flower pots in their balconies. When the prisoners walked down the
road they could be seen by the entire town. Yet testimonies of some
residents available at the camp indicate that they were not aware of the
happenings in their backyard.
At Oreinenburg, the
weather began to change. It became cloudy and windy. As we reached the
concentration camp, cold winds swept the barren landscape. Soon it
started to rain, the thin cold drops making us shiver and huddle into
our wind cheaters. The stark, silent, cold surroundings added to the
bleakness as our guide Sophia briefed us about the happenings in the
camp from 80 years ago. Some photographs on panels along the walls
leading to the camp depict cruel punishments meted to prisoners, while
others show people hard at work. At Sachsenhausen, details about
brutality come alive through testimonials provided by audio guides, some
of them translated into English. A prisoner’s testimony said, “I don’t
know how long I had passed out after the punishment. It may have been
several hours or days.”
A 12-year-old schoolboy’s
testimony at the museum in camp is a telling example of the
townspeople’s ignorance of occurrences behind the high camp walls. The
boy, who was spending his holidays with his grandparents, writes to his
parents about hearing gun shots in the camp. The walls are too steep to
scale so he has no way of knowing what was happening, he says. He ends
his letter with kisses to his parents. Some testimonies reveal that
during the height of the War, people living close to the camp did not
hang their clothes to dry outside their homes as fine soot settled on
them. The soot came from the cremation of prisoners who had died in the
camp.
Sachsenhausen was the first concentration camp
built in Germany, in 1933, with the intention of brainwashing political
dissidents. They were warned of dire consequences and later released.
Within
a couple of years, it became a camp for political prisoners of all
hues, and though prisoners had come to terms with the hard work they
were put to from dawn to dusk, their worst nightmare was the roll call
which sometimes lasted one-and-a-half days. Despite the huge presence of
SS guards and guard posts and the high walls, some prisoners made their
escape and made life doubly difficult for others. In his testimony, a
prisoner has recorded that on a cold winter night he, along with other
prisoners, stood in the yard for nearly 12 hours because the SS men
wanted to count the number of prisoners there.
At one
time during the War an estimated 60,000 prisoners were forced to use
one bathtub and around 20 toilets, all of them in just one room.
Barracks and shelves provided little space for storing possessions, most
of which were photographs of family. Although Sachsenhausen was not an
extermination camp and was designated for male prisoners, in the early
1940s, women were also brought into the camp and were exterminated
immediately. A testimonial from one prisoner said, “I heard the gun
shots and knew that the women were killed.” According to him the
incident had a deep impact on the camp inmates.
In
the camp an area has been marked “Neutrale zone”. Any prisoner who
trespassed was shot dead by the guards. It was in this part of the camp
that prisoners were employed in printing counterfeit currency. A sample
of the pound and dollar notes minted at the camp are on display in one
of the museums on the site. During the War, the counterfeit notes in 5,
10, 20 and 50 pound denominations were dropped in London in a bid to
destroy England’s economy. A similar exercise was designed to destroy
America’s economy but the plan did not succeed.
In
the middle of the camp is a long pillar built as a memorial for
political prisoners but there are thousands of other Polish, German and
Russian prisoners whose death has not been recorded at all. At the
memorial near the extermination chamber, which was built by the
prisoners, is a monument where relatives and families have left black
pebbles and dry wreaths for the numerous nameless prisoners who died
there. Sachsenhausen was also the place where the German military
experimented with the various kinds of punishments on prisoners and it
was then enforced in other camps across Germany and Poland.
Complete
with hospital, extermination chamber, neck-shot room, mortuary and
pathology laboratory (to learn the details about a prisoner’s death),
Sachsenhausen offers a glimpse into the thought processes of a
generation. There is one prisoners’ barracks with skinned wooden beams
and blackened walls. In the early 1990s, “some anti-social elements” are
believed to have tried to destroy the camp by burning it down. People
say it was an effort by neo-Nazis and the fire service was able to
prevent complete destruction. Just outside the camp, the buildings
occupied by the SS troop is now used as a police training academy.
Instead of razing it after the War, the government finally decided to
use the building for the purpose it was built.
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