“The Darkest Side of Auschwitz
*Warning HARD TO STOMACH” At the height of its operation during World War
II, Auschwitz became a machine of mass murder, torture, and unimaginable cruelty where over 1.

1
million people were killed.

But everything started to fall apart in early 1945.

Auschwitz didn’t start off as a death camp.

It actually began as a regular prison, mainly
for Polish people who were seen as threats to the Nazis.

After Germany invaded Poland in
September 1939, it took over large parts of the country.

Southern Poland, where the town
of Oświęcim was located, was one of the areas the Nazis controlled.

They changed the town’s
name to Auschwitz, and they thought it was the perfect place to set up a concentration camp.

The location was chosen for a few reasons.

First, it was far from the eyes of the
world, hidden in rural Poland.

Second, it was well connected by railroads, which made
it easy to bring in prisoners from different parts of Europe.

Third, there were already
some old army barracks there, so the Nazis didn’t have to start from scratch.

In May 1940, Rudolf Höss was chosen to be the camp’s first commandant.

He was an SS
officer, loyal to Hitler, and a man with no mercy.

Under his command, Auschwitz was
officially opened on June 14, 1940, when the first group of 728 Polish prisoners arrived.

Höss was very focused on turning Auschwitz into an efficient place, not just for holding prisoners,
but for using them.

The prisoners were forced to build the camp themselves.

By 1941, the camp started changing.

Hitler had launched Operation Barbarossa in
June of that year, Germany’s invasion of the Soviet Union.

Suddenly, thousands of Soviet
prisoners of war were captured, and the Nazis needed somewhere to put them.

Auschwitz
quickly became a holding ground for these Soviet soldiers.

Over 15,000 Soviet POWs were
brought to Auschwitz between 1941 and 1942.

Around the same time, the Nazis began planning
something far more terrifying: the “Final Solution”, their plan to wipe out all Jews in
Europe.

This was decided during a secret meeting in January 1942 called the Wannsee Conference, but
preparations started earlier.

Auschwitz was chosen as a key location for mass extermination.

In October 1941, construction began on a new part of the camp called Auschwitz II-Birkenau, located
about 2 miles from the main camp.

This new section was massive.

It was designed specifically for
mass murder.

It had huge gas chambers, underground rooms where people were killed using Zyklon B
gas, and crematoriums to burn the bodies.

While Birkenau was being built, the Nazis
tested the killing process.

In August 1941, they carried out the first gassing using Zyklon B
on a group of about 600 Soviet POWs and 250 sick Polish prisoners.

The gas, originally meant for
killing lice, worked “well” for murder.

The test was considered a “success” by Nazi standards, and
that became the method used in the Holocaust.

By 1943, Auschwitz had grown into a
huge complex of over 40 sub-camps, spread across the region.

Rudolf Höss had stepped
down briefly, replaced by Arthur Liebehenschel, but the killing continued just the same.

Höss
returned in 1944 to oversee the deportation and murder of Hungarian Jews, some of the most intense
killing operations of the Holocaust.

When people arrived at Auschwitz, their nightmare
didn’t end, it was just beginning.

Most of them had been packed into cattle cars for days,
sometimes even a week, without food, water, or toilets.

People got sick.

Some died along
the way.

But when the train finally stopped, nobody really knew what was going to happen.

They were unloaded onto a platform called the ramp.

At first, this ramp was
outside the original Auschwitz I camp, but later, a new one was built right in Auschwitz
II-Birkenau in 1944.

That made it easier for the Nazis to carry out mass selections faster.

People didn’t get a trial or even a question.

They were looked up and down.

Babies,
young kids, pregnant women, the elderly, and anyone who looked weak or sick were sent to
the left.

That meant death.

Healthy men and women who looked strong enough to work were sent to the
right.

But that didn’t mean they were safe.

Those sent to the left were told
they were going to take a shower.

It was all a lie.

The Nazis were masters at
deception.

The gas chambers were made to look like bathhouses.

Some even had fake showerheads
on the ceiling.

People were told to undress, leave their belongings in a pile, and remember
where they put their clothes, because they were told they’d come back after “disinfection.


These victims were then led into a large, sealed room.

The doors were slammed shut.

Then,
from a small opening in the ceiling or side wall, the SS dropped in Zyklon B.

It took around 15 to
20 minutes for everyone to die.

People screamed, clawed at the doors, and climbed on top of
each other in a desperate fight for air.

The strongest always died last, on top of a pile
of bodies.

The walls were scratched, and the floors were covered in blood, feces, and vomit.

These scenes happened every single day.

After the gas cleared, a special group of
prisoners known as the Sonderkommando had to go inside.

They were usually
Jewish men, chosen by the SS to do this horrible work.

They had no choice.

If
they refused, they were shot on the spot.

The Sonderkommando were forced to remove the
dead bodies, shave their heads, and pull out gold teeth.

Some of the women’s hair was later
used to make textiles.

The gold teeth were melted down and collected for the Reich.

The bodies were
then dragged to crematoriums, massive ovens where the corpses were burned day and night.

The smell
of burning flesh filled the air around Birkenau.

People in nearby towns claimed they didn’t know
what was going on, but the thick smoke and smell made it almost impossible to ignore.

There were four large crematorium buildings at Birkenau: Krema II, III, IV, and V.

Each one had underground gas chambers and furnace rooms.

In total, the gas chambers at
Auschwitz-Birkenau could kill up to 6,000 people per day when running at full capacity.

The Nazis tried to keep all of this hidden.

The Sonderkommando weren’t just used for clean-up;
they were part of the cover-up.

They were never allowed to speak or escape.

Every few months,
the SS would murder the entire Sonderkommando group and replace them with new prisoners.

This way, there would be no witnesses.

Still, some of them managed to document what was
happening.

A few wrote down their experiences and buried the notes near the crematoriums
in secret.

These notes were found years later and became vital proof of the horrors.

In October 1944, a group of Sonderkommando fought back.

They blew up Crematorium IV using gunpowder
smuggled in by women prisoners who worked in munitions factories.

The SS crushed the rebellion
quickly; most of the rebels were executed, but it showed that even in the darkest place
on earth, people still tried to resist.

One of the most shocking things about the whole
process was how organized it was.

The Nazis kept lists, charts, and timetables.

Trains ran
on schedule.

Selections were fast.

People were treated like cattle.

And all of this
was carried out by human beings who often went home at night to their families, acting
like it was just another job.

The living conditions in Auschwitz were beyond
horrible.

Prisoners were crammed into wooden barracks, especially in Auschwitz II-Birkenau.

These buildings had no heating, no insulation, and barely any windows.

Most of them were actually
old horse stables, each one meant to hold about 50 horses.

But the Nazis shoved over 700 people
into each building.

There was no privacy, no space, and barely any air to breathe.

Inside, people slept on wooden planks stacked three levels high.

There were no mattresses, just
rough wood.

No pillows.

No blankets.

In winter, the cold was unbearable.

The roofs leaked, the
floors were muddy, and rats crawled everywhere.

People often had to share a bunk with two or three
others just to stay warm.

If one person turned over at night, everyone else had to move too.

The toilets were just open pits or concrete blocks with holes.

Hundreds of people had to use
them, and they were only cleaned once a day, sometimes not at all.

The smell was unbearable,
and diseases spread fast.

There were no showers, and lice were everywhere.

Many prisoners lost all
their hair because of infection and itching.

Food was a daily struggle.

Prisoners were fed just
enough to keep them barely alive.

In the morning, they got a cup of bitter coffee or tea,
sometimes made from grass or old herbs.

At lunch, it was a thin soup, usually made from
turnips or rotten cabbage, with maybe a piece of potato floating in it.

In the evening, they got a
small piece of black bread, often hard as a rock, and sometimes a spoonful of margarine or old
sausage.

That was it for the whole day.

The daily calorie intake was under 1,000
calories, while prisoners were forced to burn several times that amount through
hard labor.

Most people lost weight fast.

Some died from starvation within weeks.

Others
developed diseases like typhus, tuberculosis, and dysentery, especially during winter.

Medicine
was almost never given, and doctors were only there for Nazi experiments—not to help.

Violence from the guards was constant.

SS officers and kapos, prisoners given power
over others, beat people for any reason, or for no reason at all.

If you walked too slowly,
you got hit.

If you looked at a guard wrong, you got hit.

If you collapsed from hunger, you got
kicked or dragged away and never seen again.

Every day started with roll call.

Prisoners had to
line up outside, even during snow or rain.

These roll calls could last for hours, sometimes from
4 a.

m.

until sunrise.

People had to stand still the whole time.

If one person was missing, the
roll call went on longer until they were found, or until everyone was punished.

Some
people froze to death right there on the spot.

Others collapsed and were shot.

If a prisoner tried to escape, the punishment was even worse.

The SS would hang the person
in front of everyone, sometimes leaving the body for days as a warning.

In other cases,
if one person escaped, the Nazis would kill ten random prisoners in retaliation.

The work inside the camp was pure hell.

Most prisoners were forced into 12 to
14 hours of hard labor every single day, no matter the weather.

In winter, temperatures
dropped below freezing.

In summer, it was burning hot.

People worked in fields, gravel pits,
factories, or carried heavy stones.

The worst jobs were in places like Buna-Monowitz.

In Buna, prisoners were pushed until they collapsed.

Those who couldn’t keep up
were considered useless and sent to the gas chambers.

This system was called
“extermination through labor.

” Basically, the Nazis used people like machines until
they broke down, then killed them.

One survivor, Primo Levi, worked in Buna and later
wrote that the only goal was to stay invisible, to not be noticed, because attention meant
danger.

Even drinking water or resting for one second could lead to a beating.

The guards were
not just cruel, they enjoyed causing pain.

There was also constant fear of the next
selection.

Even if someone wasn’t killed upon arrival, they could be chosen later if they
got sick, injured, or simply looked too weak.

Every few weeks, SS doctors came to the barracks
and made prisoners strip naked.

Those who didn’t pass inspection were marked for death.

Hope barely existed.

People who smiled or tried to help others were rare.

Suicide was
common.

Some threw themselves on the electric fences.

Others tried to walk into guard towers
to get shot.

For many, it seemed better than waking up to another day in hell.

One of the darkest and most disturbing parts of Auschwitz was the so-called “medical experiments.


But these weren’t real medical studies, they were pure torture, done in the name of
science by Nazi doctors.

The most infamous of them was Dr.

Josef Mengele, known by
prisoners as the “Angel of Death.

” Mengele arrived at Auschwitz in May 1943
and quickly became known for his calm and polite behavior, which made what he did even more
horrifying.

He had a special interest in twins, especially children.

His goal was to learn
how to create more Aryan children, and he believed twins held some kind of key to that.

When a transport of Jews arrived, Mengele would walk along the selection ramp and look for twins.

These children were taken to Block 10 or Block 32, where the experiments happened.

They were
told they were lucky because they wouldn’t be sent to the gas chambers.

But what
happened to them was often worse.

Mengele did hundreds of experiments.

He
measured their skulls, compared their organs, and took endless blood samples.

He injected dyes
and chemicals into their eyes to try to change their color, usually to blue.

This caused
infections, blindness, and terrible pain.

Sometimes he would sew two twins together
in an attempt to create artificial Siamese twins.

Their skin and blood vessels were stitched
together, often with no anesthesia.

Most of them died from infection, blood loss, or shock.

Once Mengele was done experimenting on them, he killed many of the twins with a single
injection to the heart, usually phenol.

Then he did autopsies to compare their organs.

Out of about 1,500 sets of twins brought to him, only around 200 individuals survived.

It wasn’t just Mengele.

Other Nazi doctors at Auschwitz did horrible things too.

Carl
Clauberg worked in the women’s section and focused on sterilization.

He injected
strong chemicals into women’s wombs to destroy their ability to have children.

Many
women suffered from burns, internal bleeding, and horrible infections.

Some died within
days.

Others were left sterile for life.

Another doctor, Horst Schumann, did experiments
on men.

He used X-rays to destroy their testicles, often without warning.

Victims were told they
were getting a medical check-up, but instead, they were left burned and sterile.

Some were later killed so the Nazis could study the damage to their organs.

Doctors also tested new drugs and vaccines.

They infected prisoners with diseases like
malaria, tuberculosis, and typhus, on purpose.

Then they gave them different chemicals to
see if they worked.

Most didn’t.

The patients suffered greatly and were rarely cured.

Surgeries were done without anesthesia.

Some prisoners had their limbs cut off
just to see how long they could survive or to compare healing.

Others were forced into
freezing rooms to test how long the human body could survive in cold temperatures.

These tests
were used to help German soldiers fight on the Eastern Front in the freezing Soviet Union.

There were even experiments on burns and wounds.

Some prisoners had their skin rubbed with
chemicals to cause infections or open sores, just so Nazi scientists could test
treatments.

These “treatments” often made things worse, not better.

Almost none of the people used in these experiments survived.

Those who did survive
were often left with lifelong injuries, pain, or trauma.

Auschwitz had a separate section just for women.

Conditions here were just
as bad, maybe worse.

Women were forced to strip naked and stand for hours.

Female SS
guards were known for their cruelty.

Pregnant women were usually killed right away.

If
a woman gave birth, her baby was taken and killed.

Women were also used in medical experiments,
especially those involving sterilization.

One survivor, Olga Lengyel, recalled how
newborn babies were drowned in buckets right in front of their mothers.

By January 1945, the Soviet Army was closing in on Auschwitz from the east.

The Nazis knew the
war was almost over, and they were desperate to hide what they had done.

They began destroying
anything that could be used as evidence; documents were burned, crematoriums were blown up, and
prisoners who knew too much were murdered.

On January 17, 1945, the SS started what
became known as the death marches.

Around 56,000 prisoners were forced to leave Auschwitz
and walk west toward other camps in Germany and Austria.

The weather was freezing, and most people
didn’t have shoes, coats, or food.

Thousands died along the way, shot by guards, frozen to
death, or simply too weak to continue.

Those who couldn’t walk were often shot on the
spot.

The roads were covered in snow and blood.

Many people collapsed in the cold and were
left to die.

These marches lasted for days, and very few made it out alive.

When the Red Army finally reached Auschwitz on January 27, 1945, they found something
horrible.

About 7,000 prisoners were still there, sick, dying, and barely alive.

The Soviet
soldiers were shocked by what they saw.

There were piles of dead bodies, rooms full
of human hair, thousands of shoes, suitcases, eyeglasses, and even baby clothes.

It was clear
that something terrible had happened here.

They also found the remains of the gas
chambers and crematoriums, even though the Nazis had tried to destroy them.

The evidence
was still there.

Survivors told their stories, and the world slowly began to understand
the full horror of Auschwitz.

After the war, the truth about
Auschwitz shocked the world.

In 1947, Rudolf Höss was captured, tried, and hanged
near the crematorium at Auschwitz.

Other SS officers were also tried and executed.

But many escaped justice.

Hundreds of SS guards, doctors, and workers simply disappeared or
lived quiet lives.

Some were even protected by other countries during the Cold War.

In the following decades, survivors shared their stories.

Museums were built.

The camp was
preserved as a memorial.

But the scars remain.