Auschwitz

Auschwitz is one of the most notorious concentration camps established by the Nazis during the Second World War. The name of the camp alone is synonymous with genocide and extermination. Auschwitz was located near the town of Oswiecim, Poland, and it grew into a vast complex of three main camps and over 70 subcamps.

From the camp’s beginnings in May 1940 until January 1945, when most surviving Auschwitz prisoners were marched off by their German captors and Soviet troops liberated the camp, approximately 405,000 prisoners of both sexes, from nearly all European countries were registered, assigned serial numbers, and incarcerated there. Only a fraction of the 2.5 million people who passed the gates survived the camp.

Family Camp

At Auschwitz 2, or Birkenau, several distinctive camps were established. The family camp established by the Nazis was modeled after the Theresienstadt ghetto. It was supposed to be a model camp where the International Red Cross would visit and the see how well the Jews were treated under the Nazis. This never came to fruition.

On September 8, 1943, the first residents of the Family Camps were transported to Auschwitz: 5000 Czechoslovakian Jews. They set up a model town with schools, a government, and postal system. The Nazis asked them to write post cards to their friends and relatives on March 9, 1944. The next day all the people in the family camp were gassed. The Nazis kept sending out these cards months after those who wrote them were killed. The Nazis parlance called this a Brief Aktion. Brief means “letter” and Aktion by Nazi definition is the German word for an “action” or campaign. When used by the SS or Gestapo, it often meant the roundup or murder of Jews.

This postcard was sent to Pislen, Czechoslovakia, with the return address Arbeitslager Birkenau, where the family camp was located. It was distributed through the Jewish Association in Berlin.

Politische Abteilung

A peculiarity existed in Birkenau: the Politische Abteilung, as the camp’s Gestapo office was called. This institution employed German-speaking Jewish women as secretaries. They enjoyed better living conditions than the other inmates because the SS saw to it that the inmates with whom they had daily contact had more hygienic surroundings. It is assumed that the SS preferred using Jewish women as secretaries because they were educated, had mastered several languages, and would never see freedom again, and thus would not be able to divulge any secrets.

This postcard, sent from a secretary employed in Auschwitz’s Politische Abteilung. It was placed into special mail bag #77 originating from the camp. The card was not censored, other than receiving the handstamped admonishment to write in German.


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