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MEMORIAL AND MUSEUM AUSCHWITZ-BIRKENAU FORMER GERMAN NAZI
CONCENTRATION AND EXTERMINATION CAMP

News

Roundabout and parking spaces - Better access for visitors to former camp

01-10-2007
Most of the needed land has now been purchased. The Foundation for the Memory of Shoah, from France, has provided the funding. Construction work can now begin on the roundabout and parking lot intended to improve access for visitors to the Judenrampe, the railroad siding between the sites of the Auschwitz and Birkenau German camps.

A Six-Year-Old Boy in the Resistance Movement

30-09-2007
Not many of the prisoners of the Nazi German Auschwitz concentration camp lived to see liberation. Local residents helped them, sometimes at the cost of their own lives, in the unequal struggle to survive.

Sensational, Previously Unknown Photographs of Mengele, Hoess, and Other Auschwitz Murderers

30-09-2007
The Holocaust Museum in Washington has given Auschwitz Museum historians access to the 115 photographs in an album belonging to Auschwitz SS man Karl Hoecker. Adjutant to the third Auschwitz commandant, Richard Baer, Hoecker took the pictures in the second half of 1944. An anonymous benefactor recently donated the photographs to the American museum.

International Tracing Service Visits Museum

27-09-2007
The Museum had a visit from the Red Cross International Tracing Service in Bad Arolsen, Germany. The delegation included Director Reto Meister, Archive Director Udo Jost, and Beat Schweizer, the deputy director of the International Committee of the Red Cross in Geneva. After touring the site of the Auschwitz camp, the guests met Museum Director Piotr M.A. Cywiński and Museum Archive Director Piotr Setkiewicz.

And Finally the Tourists Come

21-08-2007
A young German conscientious objector performing alternative service at the Auschwitz Museum is the protagonist of a film that opens in movie theatres across Germany today.

A New Guide to the Route of the Death Marches

20-08-2007
The Auschwitz Preservation Society has published a revised version of a guidebook following the route of one of the “Death Marches” along which Auschwitz prisoners were marched from the camp to the town of Wodzisław Sląski in January 1945.