Showing posts with label Auschwitz Oak Tree. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Auschwitz Oak Tree. Show all posts

Thursday, 20 March 2014

AUSCHWITZ: CHRONOLOGY


January 25, 1940
The SS decides to construct a concentration camp near Oswiecim (Auschwitz).
May 20, 1940
The first concentration camp prisoners—30 recidivist criminals from Sachsenhausen—arrive at Auschwitz concentration camp.
March 1, 1941
Reichsfuehrer SS and Chief of German Police Heinrich Himmler inspects Oswiecim (Auschwitz). Because nearby factories use prisoners for forced labor, Himmler is concerned about the prisoner capacity of the camp. On this visit, he orders both the expansion of Auschwitz I camp facilities to hold 30,000 prisoners and the building of a camp near Birkenau for an expected influx of 100,000 Soviet prisoners of war. Himmler also orders that the camp supply 10,000 prisoners for forced labor to construct an I.G. Farben factory complex at Dwory, about a mile away. Himmler will make additional visits to Auschwitz in 1942, when he will witness the killing of prisoners in the gas chambers.
September 3, 1941
The first gassings of prisoners occur in Auschwitz I. The SS tests Zyklon B gas by killing 600 Soviet prisoners of war and 250 other ill or weak prisoners. Testing takes place in a makeshift gas chamber in the cellar of Block 11 in Auschwitz I. Zyklon B was the commercial name for crystalline hydrogen cyanide gas, manufactured by I.G. Farben and normally used as an insecticide. The "success" of these experiments will lead to the adoption of Zyklon B as the killing agent for the yet-to-be-constructed Auschwitz-Birkenau killing center.
January 25, 1942
SS chief Heinrich Himmler informs Richard Gluecks, the Inspector of Concentration Camps, that 100,000 Jewish men and 50,000 Jewish women would be deported from Germany to Auschwitz as forced laborers.
February 15, 1942
The first transport of Jews from Bytom (Beuthen) in German-annexed Upper Silesia arrives in Auschwitz I. The SS camp authorities kill all those on the transport immediately upon arrival with Zyklon B gas.
December 31, 1942
German SS and police authorities deported approximately 175,000 Jews to Auschwitz in 1942.
January 1 - March 31, 1943
German SS and police authorities deport approximately 105,000 Jews to Auschwitz.
January 29, 1943
The Reich Central Office for Security orders all designated Roma(Gypsies) residing in Germany, Austria, and the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia to be deported to Auschwitz.
February 26, 1943
The first transport of Roma (Gypsies) from Germany arrives at Auschwitz. The SS authorities house them in Section B-IIe of Auschwitz-Birkenau, which becomes known as the "Gypsy family camp." By the end of 1943 more than 18,000 Roma (Gypsies) will have been incarcerated in the so-called family camp and as many as 23,000 Gypsies deported to the Auschwitz camp complex.
April 1, 1943 - March 1944
German SS and police authorities deport approximately 160,000 Jews to Auschwitz.
May 2, 1944
The first two transports of Hungarian Jews arrive in Auschwitz.
July 6, 1944
The deportation of Hungarian Jews is halted by order of Regent Miklos Horthy. The last transport from Hungary arrives on July 11.
August 2, 1944
SS camp authorities murder the last residents—just under 3,000—of the so-called Gypsy family camp in Auschwitz-Birkenau. The SS murders an estimated total of 20,000 Roma (Gypsies) in the Auschwitz concentration camp complex.
April 1944 - November 1944
SS and Police authorities deport more than 585,000 Jews to Auschwitz.
October 7, 1944
Members of the Jewish prisoner "special detachment" (Sonderkommando) that was forced to remove bodies from the gas chambers and operate the crematoria stage an uprising. They successfully blow up Crematorium IV and kill several guards. Women prisoners had smuggled gunpowder out of nearby factories to members of the Sonderkommando. The SS quickly suppresses the revolt and kills all the Sonderkommando members. On January 6, 1945, just weeks before Soviet forces liberate the camp, the SS will also hang four women who smuggled gunpowder into the camp.
November 25, 1944
As Soviet forces continue to approach, SS chief Heinrich Himmler orders the destruction of the Auschwitz-Birkenau gas chambers and crematoria. During this SS attempt to destroy the evidence of mass killings, prisoners will be forced to dismantle and dynamite the structures.
January 12, 1945
A Soviet offensive breaches the German defenses on the Vistula; Soviet troops take Warsaw and advance rapidly on Krakow and Oswiecim.
January 18 - 27, 1945
As Soviet units approach, the SS evacuates to the west the prisoners of the Auschwitz concentration camp complex. Tens of thousands of prisoners, mostly Jews, are forced to march to the cities of Wodzislaw and Gliwice in the western part of Upper Silesia. During the march, SS guards shoot anyone who cannot continue. In Wodzislaw and Gliwice, the prisoners will be put on unheated freight trains and deported to concentration camps in Germany, particularly to FlossenbürgSachsenhausenGross-RosenBuchenwald, and Dachau, and to Mauthausen in Austria. In all, nearly 60,000 prisoners are forced on death marches from the Auschwitz camp system. As many as 15,000 die during the forced marches. Thousands more were killed in the days before the evacuation.
January 27, 1945
Soviet troops enter the Auschwitz camp complex and liberate approximately 7,000 prisoners remaining in the camp. During the existence of Auschwitz, the SS camp authorities killed nearly one million Jews from across Europe. Other victims included approximately 74,000 Poles, approximately 21,000 Roma (Gypsies), and approximately 15,000 Soviet prisoners of war.


Copyright © United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington, DC

Wednesday, 12 February 2014

Stephen Darori on the Holocaust : Kim , Bring Me back an Acorn from Auschwitz-Birken...

Stephen Darori on the Holocaust : Kim , Bring Me back an Acorn from Auschwitz-Birken...: Oak trees near ruins of Krema III gas chamber Ruins of undressing room at Krema III with oak trees in background Poster a...

Kim , Bring Me back an Acorn from Auschwitz-Birkenau, Bring Back an Acorn for me in Zion



Oak trees near ruins of Krema III gas chamber

Ruins of undressing room at Krema III with oak trees in background

Poster at the ruins of Krema III; oak trees in background

.

 A request to my daughter Kim as she prepares to go on the journey of the March of the Living.
"Kim , Bring Me back an acorn from Auschwitz-Birkenau,  Bring  Back an Acorn for me in Zion."

Dearest Kim

I have been to Auschwitz twice in my liife. The first as a 19 year old simply to say Kaddish
and tick of " been there and done that" . 20 years later , somewhat more mature and better   informed about my relations murdered in Auschwitz , I took 5 days leave from a 3COM subcontractor journey in Europe and traveled to Auschwitz and the Forest of Rumbala where o 
many of my relations died.

At Auschwitz  I was walking down the gravel road towards the Krema III gas chamber when
 a man from the Golders Green, clutching something close to his heart , came up to me with tears streaming down his face and  asked if I would take an acorn with me.  Very puzzled and somewhat concerned about the affect a visit to Krema III would also have on me,  I said ok. When I got to the crematorium I saw oak trees that victims waited under for their turn in the gas chambers  Everywhere you dig your heel in grass you find white ash from the chimneys. I realized that the calcium, sodium and potassium even some carbon of the victims remained in the ashes and those ashes had been taken up by the oak trees for nourishment. Some tiny portion of the victims resided in the acorns. I thought if I could get some acorns out of the camp I would have liberated some of the elements of the victims, many of my relations,  all these years later.

 I gathered two  acorn  and put it in my pocket. I am not going to say here whether  those acorns made it to South Africa and later Israel. I will say that there is a beautiful oak tree in Kirstenbosch Gardens, high up on Devils Peak / Table Mountain . I smile every time I recall how I lovingly encouraged one to grow to a small  sapling  and often visited my Auschwitz oak when I climbed Table Mountain every fortnight for exercise. I will occasionally inspect its leaves and even softly spoke to it , watering it with my tears. My climbing buddies thought I was crazy and 

always asked "what, why , when" but this was between me an my Auschwitz Acorn.

 Later I read victims made tea from the acorns or ate them raw. One said if there had been any 
grass we would have eaten it, too

The other acorn was on permanent display in  Yad Vasem for years. ... it was recently given to  the Israeli Vulcan Agricultural Institute to grow into a sapling for me and perhaps in Autumn of 2014 , Kim , Jonathan, Lesleigh and I  , the only living residents of the Drues/ Shabelstok 
.Fialkov families will plant in somewhere in Yad Vashem and water it with our tears,.  

 Kim , Bring Me back an acorn from Auschwitz-Birkenau,  Bring  Back an Acorn for me in Zion.

Love you to bits
Dad
xxx

http://stephendaroriontheholocaustx1.blogspot.co.il/2014/02/a-letter-to-my-daughter-kim-before-she.html