Can Auschwitz Be Saved?
Liberated 65 years ago, the Nazi concentration camp is one of Eastern Europe's most visited sites—and most fragile
- By Andrew Curry
- Photographs by Maciek Mabrdalik
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2010, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 5)
On January 20, 1942, fourteen such functionaries assembled at a lakeside villa outside Berlin to discuss a “Final Solution” to what was called “the Jewish problem.” What we now know as the Wannsee Conference put on paper plans that Hitler and his subordinates had been talking about for months. Of Europe’s 11 million Jews, those who could work would be worked to death, following the model already created at Auschwitz and other camps. Jews who were not selected for useful labor would be eliminated.
The conference led to a dramatic increase in activity at the Nazi death camps. In a massive campaign code-named Operation Reinhard, Germans killed 1.5 million Jews at small camps deep in the forests of eastern Poland from March 1942 to October 1943. Treblinka and the now nearly forgotten camps Sobibor and Belzec consisted of little more than gas chambers and train tracks. There were virtually no survivors, no witnesses.
Auschwitz is enshrined in history in part because, as a work camp, there were survivors. Anita Lasker-Wallfisch was a 14-year-old Jewish cello student living in the German city of Breslau (now Wroclaw in Poland) when the war broke out. Two years later, she and her sister Renate were sent to work in a nearby paper factory. In 1942, after the Germans deported her parents to a death camp, the sisters doctored their identity papers and tried to escape.
They never made it beyond the Breslau train station. The Gestapo arrested them on the platform. The Lasker sisters were accused of forgery, aiding the enemy and attempted escape. After a perfunctory trial and months in a prison, they were sent to Auschwitz in separate transports as convicted felons in late 1943.
By then, Auschwitz was serving as both a slave labor facility and a death camp. As the Germans brought more and more Jews from all over Europe to the sprawling complex, SS doctors selected the fittest for work. Other prisoners were sent directly to Birkenau’s gas chambers for what was euphemistically known as a special action. “Was present for first time at a special action at 3 a.m. By comparison Dante’s Inferno seems almost a comedy,” SS doctor Johann Paul Kremer wrote in his diary on September 2, 1942. Camp records show the transport he observed contained 957 Jews from France; only 12 men and 27 women were selected for work.
When I met her at her house in London, Lasker-Wallfisch, 84, explained that she and her sister avoided the dreaded selection process because they went to Birkenau as convicts. “People shipped from prisons weren’t shipped in huge trainloads of Jews,” Lasker-Wallfisch said. “They were shipped as individuals, which was an advantage. It’s not worth turning the gas on for one Jew, I suppose.” Instead, Lasker-Wallfisch was stripped, guards shaved her head and an inmate tattooed her with an identification number (a practice unique to Auschwitz).
Lighting a cigarette in her airy, light-filled London living room, she shows me the blurred, faded number high up on her left forearm: 69388.
At some point during her induction, Lasker-Wallfisch mentioned she played the cello. “That is fantastic,” the inmate processing her said. “You will be saved.” The Birkenau women’s orchestra, responsible for keeping prisoners in step as they marched to work assignments, needed a cellist. “It was a complete coincidence,” Lasker-Wallfisch said, shaking her head. “The whole thing was complete insanity from beginning to end.”
After less than a year at Auschwitz, Lasker-Wallfisch and Renate were among the tens of thousands of prisoners transported to camps in Germany. Lasker-Wallfisch had no idea where she was being sent, but it didn’t matter. “The gas chambers were still working when we left,” she says. “I was very pleased to be rolling out of Auschwitz. We figured anything was better than the gas chamber.” On April 15, 1945, British troops liberated Lasker-Wallfisch and Renate from the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp near Hamburg. Lasker-Wallfisch emigrated to England after the war and became a professional cellist. Her sister Renate worked for the BBC, and is now living in France.
As Soviet troops closed in on Auschwitz in late January 1945, the SS hurriedly evacuated some 56,000 prisoners on death marches to the west, then blew up the Birkenau gas chambers and crematoria to erase evidence of the mass murders. The Red Army liberated Auschwitz on January 27, 1945. Some 6,000 people were still alive at Birkenau. Another 1,000 were found at the main camp.
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 4 5 Next »
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (45)
+ View All Comments
The first sentence of the article says it all, you cannot forget that moment of the visit when you realize that there is a huge room full of hair.
Posted by Mario on November 14,2012 | 04:07 PM
This is truely 100% sad. how and what he did to those poor people. innocent childern, parents, everyone. these stories and videos are very sad and touching. imagine if that was ur family member or even worse maybe you. may we never have this kind of thing ever again. may those souls rest in peace. there shouldnt be no vilence at all in this world because this is an example it doesnt prove anything nor will it your just hurting others around you. the concentration camps the gas chambers the people in it. their bodies are veryy bad. may violence never happen like this
Posted by malayka on April 12,2011 | 08:10 PM
This is truly one of the most touching articles I have ever read. My stance on the subject matter however would be to maintain the visitor aspect of Auschwitz, as the only way for the children of the future to know for themselves what happened during World War two would be to allow them to see it first hand, as the survivors of this mass atrocity are sadly disappearing. However, I believe that the site of Birkenau should be allowed to disintegrate without any human influence or contact whatsoever, and can be left as a place of mourning and grief to represent the destruction and despair brought on by the Nazi and SS regime. No wandering tourists or posing for pictures allowed, simply a untouched place that can only be viewed from afar.
Very well written article, also. Well done Curry.
Posted by Madison on February 21,2011 | 01:23 AM
We can save auschwitz if we try to and if we put our hearts into it. If we all care and spread the stories then we can sucsed
Posted by D'Wayne Watson on February 17,2011 | 10:44 AM
"There is no question as "should it be saved", only why has it not already saved. The only thing that keeps the world from repeating the same terror oven and over is teaching every child what kinds of terrible this has been done in the past by government. There are already countries that clam it never happened. Do not let the "hide it and we can deny it happen crowd win. Memorials do not show what happen and allow people in the future to deny how back things were. Rather as the way native populations were treated when the colonists first arrived in the new world, most of the truth has been lost."
How has this prevented what happened in places like cambodia, as well as other places that have witnessed similar things? Presumably you mean that this places existence will prevent another such occurrance, well it has not, there have been many such places where this kind of thing has happened, unless you mean it only apples to jews and other people can go to hell?
Posted by T.Harm on August 9,2010 | 10:44 AM
I see one blogger commented that she never hears of Theresienstadt, where her step-grandmother was held and forced to watch her husband's cremation. Theresienstadt is not as well-known as some of the other camps because it was considered a "work camp," which of course was a lie, because the prisoners were worked and starved to death. There is an interesting book that touches on this, titled "Divided Lives: The Untold Stories of Jewish-Christian Women in Nazi Germany" by Cynthia Crane. It is about Mischlinge, the children born of mixed marriages. Some of the women in the book talk about their mothers being sent to Theresienstadt. As for Auschwitz, it absolutely should be saved. Every civilized country and wealth individuals who can afford it should step up to the plate and contribute to this effort, so that the world never forgets.
Posted by Frank Henderson on April 22,2010 | 01:43 PM
My father liberated it with the 45th Infantry Division. He recalled the horror of it. He told of lying in his bunk at night hearing the machine guns going as the liberated inmates tried to escape. The army was afraid that the prisoners would lead to massive epidemics across Europe, they were so sick.
Posted by paul campbell on March 18,2010 | 02:40 PM
If you charge each of the million visitors $10 a head, there's your $10 million right there.
Posted by Ambrose Benkert on March 15,2010 | 09:18 AM
Auschwitz should be saved as a reminder to mankind how to much power can control an entire society and allow people to disregard the fact that people no matter what race, religion or creed they are human beings with hearts and souls. If mankind can massacure blacks and jews who's next?
Posted by Pamela Mitchell on March 2,2010 | 12:32 AM
What about Auschwitz 3 the slave labor camp where most inmates worked.
Posted by Martin on February 21,2010 | 02:27 PM
This is by fair one of the most emotional articles I have yet to read in Smithsonian. Incredibly detailed, nicely written, and it has a grave impact. Personally, I do believe it should be saved. It is a piece of history. Good or bad, history should be preserved as a reminder of what once was.
This article had me choking up until the final paragraph.
Spot on, Smithsonian.
Posted by Ashley on February 17,2010 | 02:49 PM
I believe Auschiwitz should be preserved for the millions of people to visit in the future to come. To educate themselves of the tragedy Hitler and his puppets have committed. To not forget, to remember and to replace ignorance with education.
Posted by Moses Checa on February 12,2010 | 06:15 PM
There is no question that Auschwitz should be preserved. It is indeed imperative that no one ever forget the horrors of the nazi regime. What never seems to come up, however, is how this regime came to power....never forget the lesson of promises that were made to the German people and how the children were so brainwashed to accept the whole premise of "dirty Jews" to begin with. When the SS terrorized, people turned on each other because of their own fears, the populace was disarmed and could no longer defend themselves, and then turned a "blind eye" to the disappearing people. Many say it could never happen again...I say, "Always be vigilant" The atrocities of the past should be remembered, not by a memorial, but by the "real thing". Don't let the past be "whitewashed". It then becomes too easy for people to believe that it was all propaganda and did not really happen. Recommended reading: "Those Who Save Us" by Jenna Blum.
Posted by C. Borchelt on February 11,2010 | 02:19 PM
There is no question as "should it be saved", only why has it not already saved. The only thing that keeps the world from repeating the same terror oven and over is teaching every child what kinds of terrible this has been done in the past by government. There are already countries that clam it never happened. Do not let the "hide it and we can deny it happen crowd win. Memorials do not show what happen and allow people in the future to deny how back things were. Rather as the way native populations were treated when the colonists first arrived in the new world, most of the truth has been lost.
Posted by Gary Wruck on February 11,2010 | 09:32 AM
+ View All Comments