The Holocaust was the systematic, state-sponsored persecution and murder of six million Jews by the Nazi regime and its allies and collaborators. The Nazis came to power in Germany in January 1933.
During the era of the Holocaust, German authorities also persecuted other groups.
"I remember the revolt which happened in October. We were again working doing trenches, and our Kommando was working somewhere, or… in Birkenau. That day the sky was so black that I thought that there was an eclipse, because you couldn't see anything;
We had no idea of the days, but we had an idea of the time. That must have been still in early afternoon because we were still out working, and it was October. We suddenly saw, and then we heard that it was a revolt. We saw very near us, perhaps a few metres away, these… some still standing, others not standing any more, being pulled with cords on their legs, perhaps twenty people, thirty people, I don't know how many there were. They were being dragged back to the crematoriums.
That was a group of people that tried to escape to tell the world what was happening, and were caught, and also eliminated, killed."
"All I remember is just being on my own, walking out of that station and walking through Prague on my own. I remember that, and just realising that… it was all somehow different, very different. A lot of Russian soldiers, and a lot of strangers all of a sudden. And, of course the first thing I did was to go back to where I used to live. I don't know what I was expecting, but obviously there was no one there because I knew they were all dead. And then I went back to where we lived last, and I went there because we were friends with a concierge there, and she said we can hide all our belongings in the cellar, and we had carpets and china and, you know, valuable things, and furniture. And when I came back and I asked about those things she said the Germans came and took it all."
Liam Lee
The Nazis made moving knife traps and pools of acid and used them to kill Jews.
"Auschwitz was very frightening. This feeling of death, all these people going in the gas chamber. It was a very weird place, very weird place. With this atmosphere of death all the time you know, and this unbelievable situation of people being… you could smell, you could smell these people being burnt. All the time you smelt this… it was a little bit like you know, when people used to boil glue, it was the bones that smelt like glue. You had volunteers who would go with the Germans you know, and get a bit of food, and they were what was called the kapo, and the block leader you know."
>This thread again You exterminationists never have an answer for pic related and continue to push lies about jews killed by engine exhaust in the millions
Look at this fine German craftmanship! Clearly these buildings were built to dump highly flammable delousing pellets into a room adjacent to a crematorium
Seventy years ago, on May 5, 1945, US troops liberated Mauthausen-Gusen, the hub of a large group of German concentration camps in Upper Austria, roughly 20 kilometers east of the city of Linz, on the river Danube. The complex had been built within months of Germany’s annexation of Austria in March 1938, and over the next seven years, almost half of the 200,000 prisoners who passed through Mauthausen died.
The majority of the Spanish prisoners at Mauthausen were detailed to quarries where they were worked to death under slave-labor conditions.
A new edition of El fotográfo del horror (or, The photographer of the horror), originally published in 2002 by historian Benito Bermejo, tells the story of Boix’s time in Mauthausen, and also includes his photographs from the Spanish Civil War.
>Boix risked his life by disobeying orders issued after the German defeat at Stalingrad in early 1943 – the turning point in the war – to destroy all photographic evidence of life, and death, in Mauthausen and its surrounding camps.
He gave evidence at the Nuremberg trials in 1946, saying he had hidden 20,000 negatives, around a third of the photographic archive, with the help of other Spaniards, although barely 1,000 of them survived.
>Babi Yar Um no sweatie, the nazis dug up those 100,000 bodies and had them cremated on giant funeral pyres to remove all traces of the massacres. Pic related taken just as the cremations were finished up clearly shows that they not only removed the traces of mass graves but even concealed the massive scarring that the cremation equipment would have left on the land. Those dastardly nazis!
Those piles of belongings are from Maidanek, which is not one of the alleged "death camps". Nobody at Majdanek was killed in the "holocaust".
Also, the pile of shoes in the Auschwitz museum are placed on a wooden board at an angle to exaggerate their number. There's like 50 pairs of shoes at Auschwitz tops.
Jaxon Bailey
Ww2 fan fiction isn’t evidence friend.
No bodies, no written orders, no Zyclon found in the gas chambers....no other historical event has laws prohibiting questioning its veracity.
Actually they do allege that Majdanek was a death camp, but they've reduced their numbers from 250k jews killed to 59k. There they allegedly used bug spray to fumigate jews to death
>The Holocaust was the systematic, state-sponsored persecution and murder of enemies of the regime by the Nazi regime and its allies and collaborators. The Nazis came to power in Germany in January 1933.
>During the era of the Holocaust, German authorities also persecuted Jews.
Wrote you a non partisan version. You're welcome, Shlomo.