Poland
Pławy

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    • Day 2

      Auschwitz-Birkenau

      July 6, 2022 in Poland ⋅ ⛅ 22 °C

      [JJ] A very sobering experience. No words are able to truly describe what went on here.

      We saw corridors upon corridors of prisoners' belongings taken from them: kids' shoes, spectacles, cooking pots, even human hair. We walked through the gas chambers, we saw the giant Auschwitz camp, then Birkenau, which was 25 times larger than even that.

      I walked a million steps last month, and if every step were a person dying then it still wouldn't be as many people that died within these fences.
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    • Day 411

      Auschwitz & Birkenau Concentration Camps

      June 23, 2023 in Poland ⋅ ☁️ 27 °C

      Today we had a very solemn experience, but we could not leave Europe without paying our respects.

      Auschwitz was the largest Nazi Concentration Camp created by the Nazis. In conjunction to it later becoming classified as an Extermination Camps well, 1.1 million of its 1.3 inmates were killed. The most well known group of these victims are those of the Jewish faith/ethnicity, but a large portion were also that of the 21K Romani (formally known more commonly as gypsy).

      The first transport of prisoners arrived on June 14, 1940. It contained 728 Poles & political prisoners. Of the 960,000 Jewish people that came to the camp, 865,000 never spent a night at Auschwitz. Many were assessed upon arrival on how fit for work they were. Only about 25% were admitted and the rest were gassed immediately.

      I took a lot of pictures where it was permitted. A lot of info on plaques in here. Below is a link to a zip of the higher res version of all my pictures. Feel free to go through them if you have the time.

      https://drive.google.com/file/d/1odJKi19HQ3QUee…
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    • Day 8

      Auschwitz

      August 19, 2023 in Poland ⋅ ☀️ 29 °C

      Nach dem wir unseren Stellplatz gefunden haben, wollten wir uns das Gedenkmahl ansehen.
      Schnell hatten wir einen Parkplatz gefunden auf dem Weg zum Gedenkmahl haben wir ein paar Bilder gemacht. Als wir rein wollten, sprach uns ein Sicherheitsmitarbeiter an, wo unsere Tickets sind.
      Nachdem er uns erklärt hat wie und wo wir die Tickets erhalten, sind wir mit dem kostenlosen Bus Transfer vom Auschwitz II nach Auschwitz I gefahren. Im Bus lief uns der Schweiß den Rücken hinunter. Endlich da, ab zum Ticketsautomat. Leider nur 2 Sprachen. Englisch und Polnisch.
      Es hat geklappt, bis wir die Uhrzeit gesehen haben, wir hätten fast 2 Stunden warten müssen. Obwohl es alles kostenlos war, haben wir uns entschieden zurück zum Platz zu fahren.
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    • Day 3

      Auschwitz e Birkenau

      May 14, 2023 in Poland ⋅ ☁️ 18 °C

      Siamo stati a visitare i due campi dì concentramento di Auschwitz e Birkenau. Esperienza altamente formativa che ci ha dato modo di pensare e riflettere sulla insensatezza di quanto accaduto
      Un’esperienza da fare almeno una volta nella vita
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    • Day 13

      Auschwitz Tag 2

      June 26, 2023 in Poland ⋅ 🌙 18 °C

      Heute stand das KZ Auschwitz und Auschwitz 2 Birkenau auf dem Plan
      Nach einem 10 Minuten Fußweg waren wir da.
      Um 9:15 began unsere 6 Stündige Führung.
      Wir schauten uns beide Lager an, und unser Weiblicher Guide (ca 50 Jahre alt) war super, sie konnte jede Frage ohne Probleme beantworten, und hat eine super gute Führung geliefert.

      Zu dem Inhalt sag ich nichts, ich kann nur jedem ans Herz legen, den weiten Weg auf sich zu nehmen und mal hierher zu kommen.
      Es ist es wert.

      Nachdem wir fertig waren sind wir kurz ins Apartment und haben uns etwas getrunken und uns kurz ausgeruht und sind dann zu unserem Restaurant von Gestern gegangen.
      Es gab Kartoffelpuffer für uns beide.

      Nach dem Essen sind wir wieder die 20 Minuten zurück gegangen und haben den Rest des Abends im Apartment verbracht.
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    • Day 23

      Auschwitz-Birkenau

      January 6 in Poland ⋅ 🌧 4 °C

      Unfortunately, I was late to book a personal ticket for Auschwitz-Birkenau, and so I had to complete a guided tour with a travel company on Get your Guide. Something that I detest to. I don't like having to miss out on a personal ticket to encourage you to buy through a travel company. Though admittedly, I had a great tour and understand why they do it. It does great things for tourism in the region and does add to the experience. The tour guide was great, and she provided a very immersive experience and I learnt a lot more than I would have without a guide. Some of the stories were horrific, and it was truly an experience I'll never forget for all the wrong reasons. We started by walking through Auschwitz, the original camp that was designed for labour. Mostly containing Polish intellectuals, prisons of war, and threats to the nazi regime, they worked endless hours with barely any food, brutal treatment, and the occasional bout of torture. In the early days, they preferred to complete the executions in the form of starvation or exhaustion. Not yet in full genocidal fervour. As we progressed, we made our way through history, and as the early 1940s arrived, we began to see the more extreme killings and treatment of prisoners. They soon realised Auschwitz was unsuitable for the quantity of people that they were beginning to imprison, and so began construction of Birkenau just a couple kilometres away, which we will get to. This was the result of beginning the mass transportation of millions of Jews out of the cities into their new 'safe home'. They told the Jewish people to bring their most precious belongings on their journey to their new safe and secure city built just for the Jews to live amongst themselves. They provided a horrificly false sense of security by having bands play music, having welcoming rooms, and the like to ensure that no panic set in. Of course, in reality, they were stripped of their belongings and sent very quickly into labour camps. Auschwitz was also the first place to have an extermination facility and crematorium. For those who arrived and could not work, the disabled, the old, and most saddly, the children and the pregnant, were sent straight to their death. These people were often put to death as soon as they arrived due to having no labour capacity. In another attempt to minimise panic and stress amongst the new arrivals, the nazis conducted one of the most macabre and gruesome things. Rather than separate the mothers from their children and likely cause panic, they would instead send all of them to the extermination facilities altogether. They would then tell them to remember the number in which they placed all their belongings so they could easily be found after their shower, then locked them in a huge factory, and suffocated them with Xyklon B, and stealing all their belongings to fund their war machine. Some of the installations showed the sheer quantity of belongings that had been stolen from their prisoners. Quite interestingly, many of the survivors of Auschwitz even found strength in themselves to complete tours of the now museum to teach people of the horrors and the disgusting treatment within the camps. One of which spent 60 years completing tours through Auschwitz. Toward the end of the Auschwitz tour, we began to explore the soldier quarters and the extermination facility. As we made our way through, we walked past the manor of Rudolf Hoess, who was the commander of both Auschwitz and Birkenau for most of the war. After he was sentenced to death in the Nuremberg trials, he was executed within the camp as a symbol to all those who died under his command. We then walked past the soldiers' quarter that was situated right next to the extermination facility. They had to have trucks running outside the soldiers' lunch room because the screams would ruin their rest time, apparently. We then saw the remnants of the crematorium and extermination facilities, of which only remain because the Germans used them as air raid shelters at the end of the war.

      When we arrived at birkenau, we learnt how many of the most incriminating buildings were destroyed to get rid of the evidence of genocide. Yet, the most daunting part of Birkenau was the sheer size of everything. They couldn't destroy it all. It was mind-blowing to walk along the train tracks and check every direction and see row after row of long thin brick buildings. We walked for 30 minutes through these buildings before arriving at a map that showed the tiny little portion that we had actually explored. The sheer size was difficult to comprehend. Even more macabre still, the nazis had become more efficient at exterminating Jews than they had been able to achieve the burning and removal of the bodies. Meaning that a facility had to be built purely to store the backlog of bodies that had not yet been burnt. Our guide then walked us through the buildings and the living conditions of the prisoners. In bunks of three, 10 people would sleep on each level. I would estimate close to a hundred bunks in each house and fucking hundreds of these houses in Birkenau. As far as the eye could see. The number to imagine is far too much to comprehend. The people on the top bunks were generally the newer, stronger prisoners because the weakest could not fight for their position. Diorhea that was prominant throughout the whole camp provides the picture as too why. You begin to understand and be able to comprehend how 6 million people died in this camp alone when you see the sheer size of it all. These were the people 'lucky' enough you have not been killed instantly upon arrival, once again determined if they could be useful to the regime. After this emotionally draining walk, we finally finished the tour. Going from the train tracks to the sorting facility, following those on the death walk, seeing the memorial and the destroyed extermination facilities, then seeing the number of concentration camps before ending with the conditions inside.

      I am a bit of a history buff, and consider my knowledge of the second world war above average, and so although I thought I knew a lot about the treatment of the Jews, I really didnt. This tour portrays a picture that can not be comprehended with words and stories. Being there and seeing the size and efficiency with which the nazis were killing innocent people puts a whole different perspective on your life. 6 million is a number that the brain can not comprehend, but seeing these sites makes it slightly easier.
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    • Day 9

      Auschwitz

      July 16, 2019 in Poland ⋅ ⛅ 18 °C

      Nach einem leckeren Bagel und Kaffee in einem süßen kleinen Café ging es los nach Auschwitz. Die Führung war sehr gut gemacht und die Tour dauerte insgesamt (inkl. Fahrt) über sieben Stunden.
      Ich denke jeder sollte Mal dort gewesen sein, auch wenn es wirklich kein schöner Ort ist.....

      Am Abend ging ich noch mit Jette in ein Pasta-Restaurant und anschließend mit noch anderen Mädels aus dem Hostel was trinken.
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    • Day 3

      Auschwitz - Birkenau

      October 13, 2018 in Poland ⋅ 🌙 11 °C

      This has been a place I’ve wanted to visit for quite some time and it didn’t disappoint. We were picked up by 8:00 for a 1 hour 20 minute drive to Auschwitz. On the bus a movie was shown about the liberation of Auschwitz - Birkenau by the Russians in 1945.
      Quite moving. The bus was silent for 5 minutes after it finished.
      We had a young guide, Michael, who took us through the camp. Auschwitz covers an area of about 6 football fields. The buildings were there before the war and used as a Polish Military Camp. The ones open now are turned into a museum. Many rare photographs showing the life of Jewish people before the camps, arrival and selection process. They thought they were being resettled and so packed their best things as they left on the trains. Especially moving are the displays of piles of suitcases( each with a name on them), pots and pans, eyeglasses, and thousands of shoes. Also the children’s shoes as well as a display case featuring some clothes where I noticed a hand sewn patch on a sweater and darned sock - a Mother had carefully repaired her child’s clothes. Also moving was the display of women’s hair.

      And then the walk through the gas chamber where so many people lost their lives.

      After Auschwitz we took a ten minute drive to Birkenau, a much larger camp that the Nazis built. This is huge - 140 football fields or a section of land. Polish people living here were told by the Gestapo to leave in one hour. The Nazis wanted the land. Our guide, Michael’s grandmother was one of these people. Rows upon rows of barracks with horrendous living conditions and four crematoriums. The famous railway track that we have seen in pictures and movies is here.

      The job of preserving Auschwitz - Birkenau was started in 1947 by survivors. Over 1 million people visit each year. It is so important that we remember this place as the saddest place of human cruelty in the world and keep passing the memory of the Holocaust down to future generations.
      As is stated at a sign at the beginning of the tour -
      “Those who do not remember the past are condemned to repeat it” - George Santayana
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    • Day 3

      Auschwitz-Birkenau

      March 8, 2019 in Poland ⋅ 🌬 12 °C

      Words cannot describe what I have seen today. I have studied the Holocaust for over 10 years, visited various museums, watched countless documentaries, read too many books to count, seen hundreds of photographs and spoken to survivors. But nothing can prepare you for this.Read more

    • Day 4

      Birkenau Concentration Camp

      March 6, 2022 in Poland ⋅ ⛅ 1 °C

      We visited this awful place after Auschwitz. The quiet here is so deep. The whole area has an aura that true evil happened here from the bunk houses to the gas chambers although I found the children’s bunk rooms to be the most heartbreaking. The weight of lives lost here is heavy on the soul.Read more

    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Pławy, Plawy

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