Before the 77th anniversary of the liberation of #Auschwitz we bring together the most important facts about the last stage of the operation of this German Nazi camp. See the rest of this [THREAD] below. 1/11
At the beginning of 1945, there were around 67,000 prisoners in the Auschwitz camp system. On 12 January 1945, the Soviets started their offensive. In mid-January head of the SS in the region, Ernst Schmauser gave the order to evacuate Auschwitz. 2/11
The final evacuation began on 17 January 1945. Around 58,000 prisoners were evacuated from the Auschwitz camp system. Columns of prisoners were leaving the camps and subcamps between 17 and 21 January. 3/11
On January 20 the SS blew up the buildings of gas chambers II (📷) and III. On January 25/26 SS units entered the camp to destroy the last one - gas chamber and crematorium V. 4/11
Some 9,000 prisoners were left by the SS in the camps. The last SS guards left the camp most probably on January 21, but there were still some SS and Wehrmacht units coming in and out. 5/11
Between January 21-27 the prisoners started searching for food and clothes on their own. Many lost their lives, either shot dead by patrolling SS guards or as a result of gorging themselves on food their feeble bodies were no longer able to digest. 6/11
Apart from the sick & weak, there was a small group of prisoners in the camp who were relatively fit as they hid during the evacuation. Some of them tried instill some order and organisation in the existing chaos. 7/11
Often risking their lives, the strongest inmates brought food items from the warehouses, collected water from the melted snow or fire-fighting water storage tanks and also cooked meals on stoves that they had found in the hospital blocks. 8/11
Auschwitz camp was liberated on 27 January by the Soviet army. On Saturday before noon, first Soviet soldiers entered Auschwitz III-Monowitz. Auschwitz I and Auschwitz II-Birkenau were liberated around 3 pm. Around 7,500 prisoners were there. 9/11
Learn more about the evacuation and liberation of Auschwitz: lekcja.auschwitz.org/en_11_wyzwolen…

Other online lessons: lesson.auschwitz.org
Podcast: auschwitz.org/podcasts
10/11
On January 27 we will commemorate #Auschwitz77. The entire event will be streamed live online also via our Twitter account. See details: 77.auschwitz.org

11/11

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More from @AuschwitzMuseum

Jan 25
25 January 1942 | Reichsführer SS Heinrich Himmler send an order to concentration camp inspector Richard Glücks that probably had the greatest impact on the entire future of the Auschwitz concentration camp. Learn more in the thread below. Image
"As it is not to be expected that Russian prisoners of war will be obtained in the near future, I order that from among the Jewish men and women emigrating [sic!] from Germany a large number of them be sent to the camps..."
"...Be prepared, therefore, to transfer 100,000 male Jews & up to 50,000 female Jews to concentration camps in the next 4 weeks. In the coming weeks the concentration camps will be entrusted with great economic orders and tasks. SS-Gruppenführer Pohl will give you the details".
Read 5 tweets
Jan 24
24 January 1932 | A Pole, Bogdan Bartnikowski, was born in Warsaw.

He arrived at #Auschwitz in a transport from the Warsaw Uprising on 12 August 1944
No. 192731
He was evacuated from Auschwitz & survived the war.
Today he celebrates his 90th birthday.
The Bartnikowski Family. The Father perished in the Warsaw Uprising, the mother & the son - Bogdan - were deported by German Nazis through Pruszków to #Auschwitz.
Bogdan Bartnikowski was 12 years old when he became a prisoner of Auschwitz no. 192731. "Two days before that, I had a normal life. I had a mother and a father. All of the sudden, I was all alone.". Watch the entire interview with Bogdan Bartnikowski: tvn24.pl/the-camp-inter…
Read 4 tweets
Jan 18
18 January 1945 | In the early morning female camp at #Auschwitz II-Birkenau began the evacuation. On that day 5,345 women left the camp and began the Death March. #Auschwitz77
The prisoners of Auschwitz III-Monowitz were evacuated in columns of 1,000 people each. The Germans left behind 850 sick prisoners in the camp.

Before evacuation of Gleiwitz I subcamp SS shot several dozen of sick & exhausted prisoners. auschwitz.org/en/history/aus…
Some 800 prisoners were led out of Janinagrube subcamp. Only about 200 of them reached KL Gross-Rosen. auschwitz.org/en/history/aus…
Read 4 tweets
Jan 17
17 January 1945 | SS physician Josef Mengele liquidated his laboratory at the BIIf section of #Auschwitz II-Birkenau. During the evacuation he took with him the entire documentation of his experiments made on prisoners: twins, dwarfs, and people with disabilities.
In Auschwitz Mengele carried out anthropometric, serological & morphological studies of the twins. He deliberately infected some children with typhus. The final phase of his experiments included killing of the twins & conducting a comparative analysis or particular organs.
Mengele’s other areas of interest were biological abnormalities, such as people with heterochromia iris - a pair of eyes with diverse coloration, the physiology and pathology of dwarfism as well as gangrenous disease of the face known as noma faciei.
Read 6 tweets
Jan 8
8 January 1942 | 60 Poles - including 4 Jews - deported to the camp by Sipo u. SD in Cracow arrived at #Auschwitz from Montelupich Prison. Among them was Adam Kopyciński, who in May 1944 became the conductor of the camp orchestra. 1/4
Adam Kopyciński was born on August 5, 1907 in Osielec Podhalański. The Germans arrested him in Cracow on August 6, 1941. In Auschwitz, he was registered as number 25294. He became a member of the camp orchestra, where he played the piano and the lyre. 2/4
At the same time, like other prisoners of the orchestra, he was employed in various work units at the main camp - he worked as a street sweeper, and then in a potato peeling room & package post office. 3/4
Read 4 tweets
Jan 5
‼️Over 563,000 people visited @AuschwitzMuseum in 2021. It is a slight increase compared to 2020; however, it is important to remember that in the period before the pandemic, over two million people visited the Museum every year. auschwitz.org/en/museum/news…
The effect of ongoing travel restrictions are refleted in the statistics. Although the number of people visiting the Memorial from abroad increased, they accounted for 51 per cent of all visitors. In the pre-pandemic period, it was usually around 80 per cent.
The vast majority of visitors, 84 per cent, learned about the history of Auschwitz from educator-guides showing them around the Museum exhibitions and site. There are currently 340 guides, giving tours in 21 languages.
Read 6 tweets

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