Transcript Group 6

Room Two
Museum Entrance
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Room One
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Room Four
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Welcome to the National Museum Of
Ghettos and Concentration Camps
Curator’s
Offices
Abbey Robertson
Curator’s
Office
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Ghettos
Room 1
Warsaw Ghetto
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[Room 4] Room
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[Room 5] Room
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Ghetto Facts
1. A few of the major Ghettos were
located in the cities of Bialystok,
Kovno, Lodz, Minsk, Riga, Vilna and
Warsaw
2. The largest Ghetto was Warsaw,
located in Poland capital city, held over
400,000 individuals in a 1.3 square
mile area.
3. Beginning on April 19, 1943, Jews in
the Warsaw Ghetto in Poland fought
valiantly against the German soldiers
who intended to round them up and
send them to the Treblinka Death
Camp. On May 16, the Warsaw Ghetto
Uprising ended after the Nazis razed
the entire ghetto in an attempt to flush
out its residents. This act of resistance
gave Jews and others through out
Europe of hope.
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Warsaw Ghettos 2
• The Germans and their auxiliaries
murdered more than 10,000 Jews in the
Warsaw ghetto during the deportation
operations.
German soldiers direct artillery against a pocket of
resistance during the Warsaw ghetto uprising.
Warsaw, Poland, April 19-May 16, 1943.
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Artifact 3
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Artifact 4
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Artifact 5
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Artifact 6
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Artifact 7
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Artifact 8
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Neuengamme-Alderney
Of 106,000 inmates, almost
half died. There were 20,400
victims/prisoners, listed by
name on the camp memorial
Neuengamme, died in the
camp and the subcamps. An
estimated 26,800 prisoners
are known to have died there
at the camp. During the last
days of the camp and
“evacuation” about 17,000
people died.
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Bardufoss concentration camp
The Bardufoss concentration camp
is located in Northern Norway.
It opened in March 1944 to reduce
overflowing prisoners in other
camps. It is estimated that some
800 prisoners passed through the
camp, and when liberated about
550 were incarcerated.
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Herzogenbusch Netherlands
Herozogenbusch Is the only concentration
camp run directly by the SS in western
Europe outside of Germany. The camp
was first used in 1943 and had a total of
31,000 prisoners. 749 prisoners died in the
camp, and the other prisoners were sent
to other camps shortly before the camp
was liberated by the Allied Forces in 1944.
Today there is a center for visitors and a
national monument of the camp and its
victims. The camp is now a museum.
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Crveni krst Serbia
This concentration camp is used to hold
captured Serbs, Jews and Romans during the
World War ll. Made in mid 1941, it was used to
hold up to 35,000 people during the war and
was liberated by the Yugoslav Partisans in
1944. More than 10,000 people are thought to
have been killed at the camp. There was a
memorial to the victims of the camp was held
on Mount Bubanj, where lots of inmates were
shot. A museum was opened on the
campgrounds in 1967 and in 1979 they were
declared a Cultural Monument of Exceptional
Importance and came under the protection of
the Socialist Republic of Serbia.
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Bredtvet Norway
People incarcerated at Bredtveit during the war
include several professors arrested during the
crackdown on the University of Oslo in October
1943.Also, a group of Jewish prisoners that
arrived in Oslo after the departure of SS Donau
stayed at Bredtveit. They left Bredtveit on 24
February 1943, and were shipped towards
Auschwitz on the following day.
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Natzweiler-Struthof France
Natzweiler-Struthof was a German
concentration camp located in the Vosges
Mountains close to the Alsatian village of
Natzwiller in France, and the town of
Schirmeck, about 50 km south west from the
us.
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Artifact 15
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Artifact 16
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Artifact 17
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Artifact 18
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Artifact 19
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Artifact 20
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Artifact 21
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Artifact 22
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Entrance
Artifact 23
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Back Wall Artifact
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