liberation and aftermath

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Lisa Pennington Social Studies Instructional Specialist Portsmouth Public Schools

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Page 1: Liberation And Aftermath

Lisa Pennington

Social Studies Instructional Specialist

Portsmouth Public Schools

Page 2: Liberation And Aftermath

Liberation began in July of 1944 when the Soviet Army moved into Majdanek, near Lublin, Poland. Majdanek was the first concentration camp to be liberated.

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A Soviet soldier stands on a pile of victims shoes in Majdanek.

Page 3: Liberation And Aftermath

The Soviets then moved on to liberate many other camps, including Auschwitz in January of 1945.

The SS fled before the advancing Red Army reached the camps, leaving behind emaciated prisoners who were barely alive.

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Page 4: Liberation And Aftermath

In many cases, the SS tried to destroy the evidence of what they had done. At Majdanek for example, the Germans destroyed the crematoria, although the gas chambers were left standing, due to the hasty retreat.

Page 5: Liberation And Aftermath

At Auschwitz, Soviet troops found overwhelming evidence of the mass murders committed. In the warehouses that remained standing, soldiers found the belongings of the hundreds of thousands of prisoners sent to Auschwitz, including 800,000 women’s suits, hundreds of thousands of shoes, eyeglasses, prayer shawls, suitcases, and 14,000 pounds of human hair.

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Clothing belonging to female victims atAuschwitz.

Page 6: Liberation And Aftermath

The Western Allies also liberated a number of camps, including Buchenwald, Dachau, and Bergen Belsen, all in 1945. The last camp was liberated by the Soviet Army on May 9, 1945.

Page 7: Liberation And Aftermath

As the troops moved into the camps, they discovered the gruesome conditions. Corpses covered the grounds, survivors were too weak to move and were infested with lice and disease.

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Page 8: Liberation And Aftermath

The Allied soldiers were shocked, horrified, and outraged at what they found in the camps. The soldiers forced the German civilians to tour the camps and view the appalling conditions.

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Page 9: Liberation And Aftermath

Many prisoners unfortunately were too weak to survive liberation. They were too malnourished or susceptible to disease and died after the Allied soldiers moved into the camps. Some camps, such as Bergen Belsen, were burnt down to avoid the spread of disease.

Some prisoners could no longer digest food, and died after well meaning soldiers shared their rations.

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Page 10: Liberation And Aftermath

Makeshift hospitals were set up, and medical teams began to examine and care for the survivors. It would be a long, slow road to recovery.

Page 11: Liberation And Aftermath

Within the camps, bodies had to be buried, survivors had to be cleaned and medically treated, and there was evidence of the Nazi crimes to examine.

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Burying the victims at Auschwitz.

Page 12: Liberation And Aftermath

Not all survivors wanted to return to their former homes, creating a need for new homes for those who had been displaced by the Holocaust.

Some who tried to return home still faced anti-semitic opposition and discrimination. Anti-semitism had been around for centuries in Europe, and it did not end with liberation. There were random violent actions against surviving Jews in Europe, some of which resulted in death.

Page 13: Liberation And Aftermath

Survivors also began to learn what became of family members and friends after the war. Those who held onto hope of seeing loved ones again only began to realize the immense losses after they were liberated. Many would go on to learn their entire families had been killed.

Page 14: Liberation And Aftermath

As survivors struggled to readjust to normal life, the world struggled to comprehend what had happened. Britain, the U.S., and the Soviet Union announced their commitment to punish Axis war criminals.

Page 15: Liberation And Aftermath

From October 18th, 1945, to October 1, 1946, the International Military Tribunal tried twenty two major war criminals. They were charged with crimes against humanity, crimes against peace, war crimes, and conspiracy to commit such crimes. Twelve of the convicted were sentenced to death, three to life in prison, and four to prison for between 10 and 20 years. Three were acquitted.

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The defendants during the Nuremberg Trials.

Page 16: Liberation And Aftermath

Further trials took place between December of 1946 and April of 1949. Another 97 people were convicted and sentenced.

The Allied powers also held trials within the zones they occupied in Germany after the war.

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Page 17: Liberation And Aftermath

Countries formerly occupied by Germany-Poland, Czechoslovakia, Romania, France, and Hungary, have also tried war criminals. Poland tried a number of people employed at Auschwitz.

Not all war criminals were caught and tried. The most well known, Adolf Hitler, avoided capture by committing suicide.

Page 18: Liberation And Aftermath

Many countries were left with a tragic legacy after World War II. Germany has worked to overcome the role it played during the war. And countless organizations have worked to ensure the Holocaust and it’s victims will never be forgotten.

“For ever let this plaque be a cry of despairand a warning to humanity where the Nazismurdered about one and a half million men,women, and children, mainly Jews, from variouscountries of Europe.”

Auschwitz-Birkenau 1940-1945