Friday, October 11, 2013

KZ Sachsenhausen

A few weeks ago I visited KZ Sachsenhausen, a Nazi concentration camp on the outskirts of Berlin. The camp was used by the Nazis from 1936 until the end of the war, at which time it became a Soviet camp for political prisoners (predominantly those who had committed war crimes during the Third Reich) until its closure in 1950. The camp was opened as a museum by the Soviets in the early 1960s, but the museum failed to commemorate the non-communist victims imprisoned there during the war years and instead commemorated the 'anti-fascist struggle' of the Soviet East against the Nazis. After German reunification the memorial was expanded to include all victims of the camp during World War II. Sachsenhausen was one of the earlier and smaller of the Nazi concentration camps and just to clarify, this camp was not an extermination camp. Although thousands of people died here, it was not established as a death camp as those in the East were. This is a very basic overview of the history of this camp. 

I'm not sure one can write a response or reaction to visiting the camp. There are no words to accurately describe the feeling of being at a place like this and knowing what happened here. Besides, who am I to tell a story I will never understand? No words that you or I could ever come up with would do justice to the victims or survivors of any of the camps. So go listen to a survivor speak. They are the ones to tell these intimate stories. 

So, in the absence of words, these are some images from the camp. 



























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