One
of the most horrific terms in history was used by Nazi Germany to
designate human beings whose lives were unimportant, or those who should
be killed outright: Lebensunwertes Leben, or "life unworthy of life".
First applied to the mentally impaired, later to the "racially
inferior", or "sexually deviant", or merely "enemies of the state" both
internal and external. From very early in the war, part of Nazi policy
was to murder civilians en masse, especially targeting Jews -- which
later in the war became Hitler's "final solution", the complete
extermination of the Jews. Beginning with Einsatzgruppen death squads in
the East, killing some 1,000,000 people in numerous massacres, later in
concentration camps where prisoners were actively denied proper food
and health care, and ending with the construction of extermination camps
-- government facilities whose entire purpose was the systematic murder
and disposal of massive numbers of people. In 1945, as advancing Allied
troops began discovering many camps, they found the results of these
policies: hundreds of thousands of starving and sick prisoners locked in
with more thousands of dead bodies. Evidence of gas chambers,
high-volume crematoriums, thousands of mass graves, documentation of
awful medical experimentation, and much more. The Nazis killed more than
10 million people in this manner, including 6 million Jews. (This entry
is Part 18 of a weekly 20-part retrospective of World War II) [45 photos]
Warning: All images in this entry are shown in full, not screened out for graphic content. There are many dead bodies. The photographs are graphic and stark. This is the reality of genocide, and of an important part of World War II and human history.
An emaciated 18-year-old Russian girl looks into the camera lens during
the liberation of Dachau concentration camp in 1945. Dachau was the
first German concentration camp, opened in 1933. More than 200,000
people were detained between 1933 and 1945, and 31,591 deaths were
declared, most from disease, malnutrition and suicide. Unlike Auschwitz,
Dachau was not explicitly an extermination camp, but conditions were so
horrific that hundreds died every week. (Eric Schwab/AFP/Getty Images)
This photo provided by Paris' Holocaust Memorial shows a German soldier
shooting a Ukrainian Jew during a mass execution in Vinnytsia, Ukraine,
sometime between 1941 and 1943. This image is titled "The last Jew in
Vinnitsa", the text that was written on the back of the photograph,
which was found in a photo album belonging to a German soldier. (AP Photo/USHMM/LOC) #
German soldiers question Jews after the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising in 1943.
In October 1940, the Germans began to concentrate Poland's population
of over 3 million Jews into overcrowded ghettos. In the largest of
these, the Warsaw Ghetto, thousands of Jews died due to rampant disease
and starvation, even before the Nazis began their massive deportations
from the ghetto to the Treblinka extermination camp. The Warsaw Ghetto
Uprising -- the first urban mass rebellion against the Nazi occupation
of Europe -- took place from April 19 until May 16 1943, and began after
German troops and police entered the ghetto to deport its surviving
inhabitants. It ended when the poorly-armed and supplied resistance was
crushed by German troops. (OFF/AFP/Getty Images) #
After the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, the Ghetto was completely destroyed.
Of the more than 56,000 Jews captured, about 7,000 were shot, and the
remainder were deported to killing centers or concentration camps. This
is a view of the remains of the ghetto, which the German SS dynamited to
the ground. The Warsaw Ghetto only existed for a few years, and in that
time, some 300,000 Polish Jews lost their lives there. (AP Photo) #
A German in a military uniform shoots at a Jewish woman after a mass
execution in Mizocz, Ukraine. In October of 1942, the 1,700 people in
the Mizocz ghetto fought with Ukrainian auxiliaries and German policemen
who had intended to liquidate the population. About half the residents
were able to flee or hide during the confusion before the uprising was
finally put down. The captured survivors were taken to a ravine and
shot. Photo provided by Paris' Holocaust Memorial. (AP Photo/USHMM) #
Jewish deportees in the Drancy transit camp near Paris, France, in
1942, on their last stop before the German concentration camps. Some
13,152 Jews (including 4,115 children) were rounded up by French police
forces, taken from their homes to the "Vel d'Hiv", or winter cycling
stadium in southwestern Paris, in July of 1942. They were later taken to
a rail terminal at Drancy, northeast of the French capital, and then
deported to the east. Only a handful ever returned. (AFP/Getty Images) #
Anne Frank poses in 1941 in this photo made available by Anne Frank
House in Amsterdam, Netherlands. In August of 1944, Anne, her family and
others who were hiding from the occupying German Security forces, were
all captured and shipped off to a series of prisons and concentration
camps. Anne died from typhus at age 15 in Bergen-Belsen concentration
camp, but her posthumously published diary has made her a symbol of all
Jews killed in World War II. (AP Photo/Anne Frank House/Frans Dupont) #
The arrival and processing of an entire transport of Jews from
Carpatho-Ruthenia, a region annexed in 1939 to Hungary from
Czechoslovakia, at Auschwitz-Birkenau extermination camp in Poland, in
May of 1944. The picture was donated to Yad Vashem in 1980 by Lili
Jacob. (AP Photo/Yad Vashem Photo Archives) #
Czeslawa Kwoka, age 14, appears in a prisoner identity photo provided
by the Auschwitz Museum, taken by Wilhelm Brasse while working in the
photography department at Auschwitz, the Nazi-run death camp where some
1.5 million people, most of them Jewish, died during World War II.
Czeslawa was a Polish Catholic girl, from Wolka Zlojecka, Poland, who
was sent to Auschwitz with her mother in December of 1942. Within three
months, both were dead. Photographer (and fellow prisoner) Brasse
recalled photographing Czeslawa in a 2005 documentary: "She was so young
and so terrified. The girl didn't understand why she was there and she
couldn't understand what was being said to her. So this woman Kapo (a
prisoner overseer) took a stick and beat her about the face. This German
woman was just taking out her anger on the girl. Such a beautiful young
girl, so innocent. She cried but she could do nothing. Before the
photograph was taken, the girl dried her tears and the blood from the
cut on her lip. To tell you the truth, I felt as if I was being hit
myself but I couldn't interfere. It would have been fatal for me." (AP Photo/Auschwitz Museum) #
A victim of Nazi medical experimentation. A victim's arm shows a deep
burn from phosphorus at Ravensbrueck, Germany, in November of 1943. The
photograph shows the results of a medical experiment dealing with
phosphorous that was carried out by doctors at Ravensbrueck. In the
experiment, a mixture of phosphorus and rubber was applied to the skin
and ignited. After twenty seconds, the fire was extinguished with water.
After three days, the burn was treated with Echinacin in liquid form.
After two weeks the wound had healed. This photograph, taken by a camp
physician, was entered as evidence during the Doctors Trial at
Nuremberg. (U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, NARA) #
Prisoners at the electric fence of Dachau concentration camp cheer
American soldiers in Dachau, Germany in an undated photo. Some of them
wear the striped blue and white prison garb. They decorated their huts
with flags of all nations which they had made secretly as they heard the
guns of the 42nd Rainbow Division getting louder and louder on the
approach to Dachau. (AP Photo) #
Prisoners on a death march from Dachau move towards the south along the
Noerdliche Muenchner Street in Gruenwald, Germany, on April 29, 1945.
Many thousands of prisoners were marched forcibly from outlying prison
camps to camps deeper inside Germany as Allied forces closed in.
Thousands died along the way, anyone unable to keep up was executed on
the spot. Pictured, fourth from the right, is Dimitry Gorky who was born
on Aug. 19, 1920 in Blagoslovskoe, Russia to a family of peasant
farmers. During World War II Dmitry was imprisoned in Dachau for 22
months. The reason for his imprisonment is not known. Photo released by
the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum. (AP Photo/USHMM, courtesy of KZ Gedenkstaette Dachau) #
American soldiers walk by row after row of corpses lying on the ground
beside barracks at the Nazi concentration camp at Nordhausen, Germany,
on April 17, 1945. The camp is located about 70 miles west of Leipzig.
As the camp was liberated on April 12, the U.S. Army found more than
3,000 bodies, and a handful of survivors. (AP Photo/US Army Signal Corps) #
General Patch's 12th Armored Division, forging their way towards the
Austrian border, uncovered horrors at a German prison camp at
Schwabmunchen, southwest of Munich. Over 4,000 slave laborers, all Jews
of various nationalities, were housed in the prison. The internees were
burned alive by guards who set fire to the crude huts in which the
prisoners slept, shooting any who tried to escape. Sprawled here in the
prison enclosure are the burnt bodies of some of the Jewish slave
laborers uncovered by the US 7th Army at Schwabmunchen, May 1, 1945. (AP Photo/Jim Pringle) #
These dead victims of the Germans were removed from the Lambach
concentration camp in Austria, on May 6, 1945, by German soldiers under
orders of U.S. Army troops. As soon as all the bodies were removed from
the camp, the Germans buried them. This camp originally held 18,000
people, each building housing 1,600. There were no beds or sanitary
facilities whatsoever, and 40 to 50 prisoners died each day. (AP Photo) #
A young man sits on an overturned stool next to a burnt body in the
Thekla camp outside Leipzig, in April of 1945, after the US troops
entered Leipzig April 18. On the 18th of April, the workers of the
Thekla plane factory were locked in an isolated building of the factory
by the Germans and burned alive by incendiary bombs. About 300 prisoners
died. Those who managed to escape died on the barbed wire or were
executed by the Hitler youth movement, according to a US captain's
report. (Eric Schwab/AFP/Getty Images) #
Burned bodies of political prisoners of the Germans lie strewn about
the entrance to a barn at Gardelegen, Germany on April 16, 1945 where
they met their death a the hands of German SS troops who set the barn on
fire. The group tried to escape and was shot by the SS troops. Of the
1,100 prisoners, only 12 managed to escape. (AP Photo/U.S. Army Signal Corps) #
A pile of bodies left to rot in the Bergen-Belsen camp, in Bergen,
Germany, found after the camp was liberated by British forces on April
20, 1945. Some 60,000 civilians, most suffering from typhus, typhoid and
dysentery, were dying by the hundreds daily, despite the frantic
efforts by medical services rushed to the camp. (AP Photo) #
German SS women remove bodies of their victims from trucks in the
concentration camp at Belsen, Germany, on April 28, 1945. Starvation and
disease killed hundreds of the many thousands imprisoned at the camp.
British soldiers holding rifles in the background stand on the dirt
which will fill the communal grave. (AP Photo/British official photo) #
A German mother shields the eyes of her son as they walk with other
civilians past a row of exhumed bodies outside Suttrop, Germany. The
bodies were those of 57 Russians killed by German SS troops and dumped
in a mass grave before the arrival of troops from the U.S. Ninth Army.
Soldiers of the 95th Infantry division were led by informers to the
massive grave on May 3, 1945. Before burial, all German civilians in the
vicinity were ordered to view the victims. (U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, U.S. Army Signal Corps) #
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