Quizzes & Puzzles0 min ago
auschfits
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Yes - Auschwitz (spelling) was part of the network of extracting raw materials (coal etc) from the land to contribute to the national economy. This was done partly with the use of slave labour from political prisoners in the concentration camps.
Auschwitz did not become a mass-extermination camp until about 1942, when the decision was made by the Nazi government to kill all the Jews in Germany and in the occupied areas.
When the Nazis came to power in 1933, the initial attitude towards how the Jewish "problem" should be "solved" was that they should be gradually excluded from society, marginalised, deprived of their property and expelled. The process of expelling Jews from the occupied areas (to America, Britain, Palestine, Switzerland or wherever) gradually became more and more difficult because the countries which received Jewish refugees put more and more restrictions on the numbers accepted, and put conditions on accepting only those who had wealth and could support themselves or contribute to the economy. These restrictions came into being because the Nazis wanted to strip the Jews of all their wealth and possessions before expelling them.
These factors gradually produced a vicious spiral which meant that there were gradually fewer and fewer possible "solutions" of what should be done with the jews, and eventually led to the simplistic decision that they should all be killed rather than expelled. This is why the extermination programme did not start until the 1940s, and the concentration camps were used for re-settlement and forced labour for a number of years before the extermination began.
You refer to manufacturing in German concentration camps, and I hope that the following may be of interest to you.
You refer to manufacturing in German concentration camps, and I hope that the following may be of interest to you.
In answer to a question I posted the following in another section of Answerbank but it fell on stoney ground there. I therefore reproduce it here in the hope that it adds something of interest:-
The Dora concentration camp (also known as Dora-Mittelbau, Dora-Nordhausen or Nordhausen) was in central Germany in the southern Harz Mountains. It was originally a subcamp of Birkenau, then of Buchenwald. It was enclosed by an electrified barbed-wire fence with a crematoria located in the north of the camp. In October 1944, the SS made Dora an independent concentration camp. Allied air raids obliged the Germans to construct of an underground production facility at Dora to produce Weapons of Retaliation (Vergeltungswaffen - V-2 rockets). Prisoners in Dora were thereafter kept mostly underground, deprived of daylight and fresh air, were forced to dig vast unstable tunnels and imprisoned in the unstable tunnels. The mortality rate was higher than at most other concentration camps. Dora-Mittelbau had a rolling prisoner population of at least 12,000. In May 1944 I had to go to Dora to assist in identifying two 6 stone live hairless skeletons who had total amnesia. They were two young service women colleagues. Some of the SS guards were held in captivity nearby. Those I saw looked well fed and normal. All wore Swastika armbands.
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