28
The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp. History. Terezin originally was a walled city and small fortress in Czechoslovakia built in the 1800’s to protect the river and roads in the area When Nazi Germany took over much of Czechoslovakia in 1939, they renamed the town of 7000 Theresienstadt - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

The Holocaust:Terezin Concentration Camp

Page 2: The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

History

• Terezin originally was a walled city and small fortress in Czechoslovakia built in the 1800’s to protect the river and roads in the area

• When Nazi Germany took over much of Czechoslovakia in 1939, they renamed the town of 7000 Theresienstadt

• Plans began to convert the town and fortress into a concentration camp for Jews and other “non-Aryans”

Page 3: The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

Construction

• Construction to convert the village and fortress into a concentration camp began in 1940

• Work was done by two groups of Jewish slave labor from another camp

Guards lead workers preparing the camp

Page 4: The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

Purposes of Terezin Camp• Terezin was not an extermination camp such as

Auschwitz and other “death camps” in Poland• The camp was mainly designed as a slave labor

camp (prisoners were forced to work) and a transit camp (prisoners were sent here for a short time before being sent to death camps further east)

• Terezin was unique because it was also used by the Nazis for propaganda. Originally, well- known Jewish artists and musicians were sent here so that their German supporters, and the world, would believe they, and other Jews, were being treated fairly well, as the Nazi’s claimed

Page 5: The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

Location and Population• Terezin was located in

Czechoslovakia • It was about 35 miles

north of the large city Prague

• Most of its later prisoners were Czechoslovakian Jews and other “non-Aryans”, but people from over 25 countries were eventually sent to Terezin

TerezinPrague

Page 6: The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

Camp Layout• Terezin had two main

parts, the fortress and the village

• The village was converted to a “ghetto” or place to crowd in and concentrate Jews and others behind walls

• The fortress was used for administration and as a place to hold and punish those who had violated rules

Walled Village (became ghetto)

Fortress

Page 7: The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

Terezin Ghetto• The Terezin ghetto was

simply the village converted to a concentration camp with walls and barbed wire

• The village, before the Nazis, had 7000 non-Jewish people, all who had to leave by early 1942

• At it’s height, Terezin held over 55,000 people

• The Jews had to choose their own leaders to run the ghetto according to Nazi demands

Terezin leaders

Terezin ghetto map

Page 8: The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

Terezin Fortress• The small fortress

outside the village was converted into the administration offices and guard barracks

• The cellblocks were converted to use for prisoners who broke rules

• There was also a medical area where experiments were performed

Cell Blocks and Crematorium

Cell Blocks

Cell Interior

Medical Wing

Page 9: The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

Crematorium

• Terezin was not built with cremation facilities

• However, so many prisoners were dying that a crematorium building was built in September 1942

• Bodies of prisoners were burned and the ashes dumped in the river

Crematorium today

Gas Oven

Page 10: The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

Arrival

• Jews and others were rounded up throughout German territories and sent to camps like Terezin

• Originally, many elderly, children, and artists were sent to Terezin

Page 11: The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

Prisoner Identification• Unlike prisoners at some

concentration camps, prisoners at Terezin were not tattooed for identification

• Instead, prisoners had to wear a metal identity badge around their necks

• One of the reasons prisoners were not tattooed because of Terzin’s use for propaganda

Page 12: The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

Living Conditions

• In general, conditions at Terezin were better than at other camps

• Still, overcrowding, forced labor, starvation, disease, abuse, torture and death were common at Terezin

Page 13: The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

Cultural Life

• Even in these horrible conditions, cultural life survived and thrived

• Children were secretly taught by elders• There were several bands and orchestras that

were organized among Terezin prisoners• Plays were performed regularly• Artists captured scenes of camp life and

smuggled them out or hid them for discovery

Page 14: The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

One of four prisoner orchestras Children act in camp performances

Page 15: The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

Terezin as Labor Camp

• Prisoners were used as slave labor to produce materials for the Nazi war machine

• Work included splitting mica, building boxes and coffins, or spraying German uniforms white for camouflage on the Russian Front Terezin gate with common concentration

camp motto: “Liberation through Work”

Page 16: The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

Terezin as Transit Camp• Terezin was also used as a

transit camp to temporarily hold people before they were sent east to extermination camps

• All prisoners arrived at the train station and marched the two miles to the camp

• Transit prisoners would only stay until there was room to transport them east to extermination camps and then they would march back to the station

Terezin train station in WWII

Terezin tracks today leading to the east

Page 17: The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

Terezin as Nazi Propaganda

• From the beginning, Terezin was used as propaganda to “prove” that the Nazi’s were treating Jews and others well

• Nazis claimed that Terezin was used to “protect” the Jews

• Famous Jewish artists and musicians were sent here to show their German fans that they were well treated

• In 1943, 456 Dutch Jews arrived at Terezin and soon the Dutch and Swedish Red Cross demanded to see conditions at the camp

• To try to show the world that rumors of atrocities against Jews and others were untrue, Nazi leaders allowed a carefully controlled visit to Terezin by the Red Cross on June 23, 1944, a unique event in Nazi concentration camps

Page 18: The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

Preparing for the Red Cross Visit

• The Nazis went to great lengths to prepare Terezin• Thousands of prisoners were sent east to make the

camp appear less crowded• The Red Cross route and areas to visit were carefully

controlled• Rooms were enlarged and cleaned for the visit, with

only 2-3 people per room where the Red Cross members visited

• Fake sinks that were not hooked up to water were installed to make conditions appear to be better

• The Red Cross reported that the Jews at Terezin were reasonably well treated in their official report

Page 19: The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

Real Showers and Fake Sinks

Actual Terezin showers which were always in short supply as was housing, sanitation, food, and freshwater

The Nazis installed these sinks just for the Red Cross visit but they were never connected

Page 20: The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

Red Cross VisitPreparing Dinner

Paintings done by prisoners while at Terezin or reproduced later

Page 21: The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

Propaganda Movie• The Red Cross visit

was considered such a success that they decided to film a propaganda movie at Terezin to counter growing international knowledge of the true nature of German concentration camps

• The film was made in the late summer of 1944

Scene from Nazi propaganda film showing happy people and good conditions at Terezin

Page 22: The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

Liberation of Terezin• Near the end of WWII, as

the Soviet Red Army pushed towards Germany from the east, prisoners were sent west adding more prisoners to camps like Terezin

• On May 8, 1945 Russian troops liberated the camp

• An epidemic of Typhus, spread by prisoners brought from the east broke out in Terezin, killing many prisoners shortly after being freed

Survivors of Terezin

Russian sign announces Terezin under quarantine for Typhus (a deadly, communicable disease

Page 23: The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

Terezin by the Numbers• Terezin concentration camp was in operation from

November 24, 1940-May 8, 1945• Terezin had a population of 7000 before the war• It’s population peaked at over 55,000 prisoners during

the war and it averaged between 30,000-35,000• Over 144,000 people from over 25 countries went

through the gates of Terezin• Over 33,000 people were murdered or died from

conditions at Terezin• Over 88,000 died after being sent east to death camps• Less than 20,000 people survived• Out of 15,000 children under 15, less than 1500 survived

Page 24: The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

Terezin Today• The fortress at Terezin

was used to hold Nazi prisoners for a short time after WWII

• Czechoslovakia became a communist country

• Terezin returned to its roots as a medium-sized town after the war

• Today Terezin is part of the Czech Republic

Page 25: The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

Terezin Museum and Monument

• Terezin remained fairly quiet about its past under communism

• A Terezin Museum was finally created in 1989

• Every year it is visited by thousands to remember and learn

Fortress graveyard today

Terezin Museum

Terezin Monument

Page 26: The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

Why Remember?• We need to remember

Terezin and the Holocaust to honor the memory of its victims and to see the consequences of intolerance

• Also, we need to understand Terezin and the Holocaust to try to recognize and fight against modern genocides happening today- right now

Bodies discovered in a Polish ghetto- 1945

Bodies discovered from the genocide in the Darfur region of Africa- present day

Page 27: The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

Lisl Bogart: Eyewitness to Terezin• On May 14th 2007, Mrs. Lisl Bogart

spoke at Guilford High School• Lisl was a teenager living in Prague,

Czechoslovakia when the Nazis sent her and her family to Terezin

• Mrs. Bogart survived 3 ½ years at Terezin

• Her mother, father, and brother were sent from Terezin to Auschwitz where they were all murdered

• Mrs. Bogart speaks around the country as an eyewitness to the history of the Holocaust

Page 28: The Holocaust: Terezin Concentration Camp

Yael fisherCHS