Friday, October 31, 2008
What you are looking at here is an area between the large buildings you saw in the previous pictures. To your right was the building that dealt with punishment. (as if these people needed anymore) As you look at the picture the dark stone is the place where they would shoot people for whatever reasons. The Nazis obviously needed a material that could handle the the stress of the frequent executions better than brick. Yet as you are draw closer to the wall you see hundreds of pock marks in the wall. You run your hand over the marks and you are shocked at the effect they have. I turned around and saw what was the last thing they saw. Then you look at the marks and the utter insanity, incomprehensibility of where you are standing wash over you. You walk away with no words or thoughts to absorb it all.
Then the last picture shows one of the rooms that faced the execution area where people heard and waited for their turn to stand in front of the grey stone.
Thursday, October 30, 2008
As you walk through the various buildings our guide, explains their different uses. All the buildings look the same and it is easy to think that the interior would be similar, but each had its own story of use in the process of destruction. It really hits you that it was a process. That the process had a purpose, the elimination of groups of people. Planned, thought out, organized, and successful. After all who would go see if it hadn't been successful. What an irony
Who carried these cases, what hopes were packed inside. These represent peoples lives, I took pause at the thought of what I would like to represent me; a suitcase never came to mind!
Who carried these cases, what hopes were packed inside. These represent peoples lives, I took pause at the thought of what I would like to represent me; a suitcase never came to mind!
Ausschwitz
These are more picutres of Auschwitz You can see how large this section of the camp is with its guard towers and fences.
Auschwitz
It has been weeks since I posted. There are so many reasons for it, but I would say the main one is to try and put into words what it is like to be at Auschwitz is like trying to empty the ocean with a thimble.
The day of our visit was filled with rain, at first it was the kind of rain that made you want to run for cover and stay there until it is over, but unlike ourselves the dear souls that arrived there found none. As the day wore on it turn to a soft drizzle the simply gray dark skies How fitting.
What you see here are the part of the camp call Aushwitz. It originally was a camp for the Polish army. The German efficency. The buildings housed workers. The Germans meeded slave labor.
The bottom picture is the famous saying that greeted a prisoner as they entered the camp-"Work will make you free"
The day of our visit was filled with rain, at first it was the kind of rain that made you want to run for cover and stay there until it is over, but unlike ourselves the dear souls that arrived there found none. As the day wore on it turn to a soft drizzle the simply gray dark skies How fitting.
What you see here are the part of the camp call Aushwitz. It originally was a camp for the Polish army. The German efficency. The buildings housed workers. The Germans meeded slave labor.
The bottom picture is the famous saying that greeted a prisoner as they entered the camp-"Work will make you free"
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