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The Auschwitz Album is the only surviving visual evidence of the process leading to the mass murder at Auschwitz-Birkenau. It is a unique document and was donated to Yad Vashem by Lilly Jacob-Zelmanovic Meier.
- Album
The Auschwitz Album Arrival. Home; Album. Arrival;...
- Multimedia
Auschwitz-Birkenau was the largest extermination center...
- Selection
The Auschwitz Album Selection. Home; Album. Arrival;...
- Assignment to Slave Labor
The Auschwitz Album Assignment to Slave Labor. Home; Album....
- Kanada
The Auschwitz Album "Kanada" Home; Album. Arrival;...
- Last Moments before the Gas Chambers
The Auschwitz Album Last Moments before the Gas Chambers....
- Album
A photograph from the Auschwitz Album of selection at Auschwitz II-Birkenau on May 27, 1944. Selection (German: Selektion) was the process of designating inmates either for murder or forced labor at a Nazi concentration camp. [1]
The exceptional status of the Sonderkommando photographs opens up debate about the memory and visual representation of the Holocaust. Sonderkommandos (special operatives or units) were prisoners who were forced to perform inhumanly gruesome tasks, or die.
They were mainly occupied with camp extermination operations, carrying out the selection of the arriving Jewish transports and the patients in the prisoner hospitals, supervising the killing of Jews in the gas chambers, being present at executions, conducting experiments on prisoners on behalf of German pharmaceutical companies or out of their ...
2 Αυγ 2016 · Students deepen their examination of human behavior during the Holocaust by analyzing and discussing the range of choices available to individuals, groups, and nations.
In addition, there are over 130,000 photographs of victims, which were attached to Pages of Testimony. The collection documents a variety of areas: Jewish life before and during the Holocaust; the lives of the survivors in Europe after the war; Holocaust commemoration activities around the world, and so on.
The Museum of Fine Arts in Boston last year hosted a harrowing and courageous body of work by photojournalist Henryk Ross, a Polish Jew who took it upon himself to document the horrific conditions inside a ghetto during the Holocaust.