Auschwitz-Birkenau – eine deutsche Todesfabrik
| Edition name | Date |
|---|---|
| Kłodziński Stanisław; 04.05.1918, Kraków, Auschwitz-Birkenau – niemiecka fabryka śmierci | 14.08.2024 |
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Subject:
Auschwitz-Birkenau – the German factory of death ; Auschwitz-Birkenau – the German death factory ; Resistance movement in Auschwitz
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Location:
Bydgoszcz ; KL Auschwitz II (Birkenau) ; KL Mauthausen-Gusen (Austria) ; KL Auschwitz I, Block 11 and Death Wall ; KL Auschwitz I, gas chamber and crematorium I ; KL Auschwitz I, Block 10 ; KL Auschwitz I ; KL Auschwitz II (Birkenau), gas chambers and crematoriums II, III, IV, V ; KL Auschwitz II (Birkenau), "Little White House” ; Sosnowiec (Śląskie Voivodeship) ; Dęblin
Victims:
Civilians ; The Civilian Population ; The Poles ; The Jews ; Women ; The Inteligentsia ; Prisoners of War ; Children ; The Russians ; Russians/Soviets ; Greeks ; Hungarians
Perpetrators:
SS ; Collaboration ; The Secret Police of Nazi Germany (Geheime Staatspolizei, the Gestapo) ; Criminal Police (Kriminalpolizei, Kripo)
Crimes:
Execution ; Racial policy ; "Dosing" ; Gas chambers ; Economic exploitation ; Robbery ; Death by shooting ; Hanging ; Cremation ; Cremation of corpses ; Judicial crime ; Round-up ; Beating ; Brutal interrogation/Tortures ; The hate campaigns/propaganda ; Biological extermination ; Deportation
Place:
Content:
Underground Activity/Diversionism and Sabotage ; Civil resistance ; Sonderaktion "Ungarn" ; Extermination of Jews ; Underground media ; Underground courts ; Government of the Republic of Poland in exile ; Health service ; Obliterating the traces ; obliterating the traces ; Aktion Zamość ; Sonderaktion „Ungarn“
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Subject and keywords
Zivilbevölkerung Polen Juden Frauen Intelligenz Kriegsgefangene Kinder Russen/Sowjets Griechen UngarnCollections to which an object is assigned:
Date of last modification:
Aug 14, 2024
Object addition date:
Jan 26, 2018
Number of object content views:
5553
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| Edition name | Date |
|---|---|
| Kłodziński Stanisław; 04.05.1918, Kraków, Auschwitz-Birkenau – niemiecka fabryka śmierci | 14.08.2024 |
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All documents in the testimony database of the Witold Pilecki Institute of Solidarity and Valor originating from the archives of the Institute of National Remembrance (their originals are stored in the archive of the Institute of National Remembrance) are made publicly available in accordance with the provisions of the Act of 18 December 1998 on the Institute of National Remembrance – Commission for the Prosecution of Crimes against the Polish Nation.
All documents from the archives of the Hoover Institution, based in the USA – the digital copies of which have been transferred in favor of the Institute by the National Digital Archives pursuant to an agreement concluded by and between the National Digital Archives, the Central Archive of Modern Records, the Hoover Institution, and the Witold Pilecki Institute of Solidarity and Valor – are made publicly available in accordance with the provisions of the Act of 14 July 1983 on National Archival Resources and Archives.
All materials from the archives of the Committee for the Commemoration of Poles who Saved Jews – the digital copies of which have been obtained by the Witold Pilecki Institute of Solidarity and Valor pursuant to an agreement concluded by and between the Committee and the Institute – are made publicly available in accordance with the provisions of the Act of 14 July 1983 on National Archival Resources and Archives.
On the basis of the agreement between the Katyn Museum – branch of the Polish Army Museum and the The Witold Pilecki Institute of Solidarity and Valor, the Institute has acquired digital copies of the materials from the collection of the Museum, which are made available in accordance with the Act of 14 July 1983 on the National Archival Resources and Archives.
Compositions written by Polish children on the subject of the Second World War from the collections of the Archives of Modern Records, the State Archives in Kielce, and the State Archives in Radom are made available by the Witold Pilecki Institute of Solidarity and Valor in accordance with the Act of 14 July 1983 on the National Archival Resources and Archives.
The “Chronicles of Terror” testimony database provides access to the Second World War accounts of Polish citizens, who suffered immense hardship at the hands of the German and Soviet totalitarian regimes. The repository features, among others, depositions given by witnesses to crimes committed by Nazi Germany during the occupation of Poland in the years 1939–1945. These accounts were held by the Main Commission for the Investigation of German Crimes in Poland and its legal successors. We also publish the testimonies of Poles who left the Soviet Union together with General Anders’ Army. These were collected from 1943 on by the Documentation Office of the Polish Army in the East. The depositions concerning Poles who helped Jews during the occupation were collected from 1999 on by the Committee for the Commemoration of Poles who Saved Jews. Accounts concerning the victims of the Katyn Massacre were collected by the historian Jędrzej Tucholski. At the end of the 1980s, he carried out a nation-wide campaign to gather information about the victims of the Soviet crime, by means of the “Zorza” Catholic Family Weekly. Children’s compositions about their wartime experiences were created in response to a competition organized in 1946 with the approval of the Ministry of Education. The competition was held in primary schools under the supervision of regional education authorities and school inspectorates. The essays were then deposited in the Archives of Modern Records and other state archives in Poland.
The accounts record the harrowing experiences of Polish citizens – victims of the terror of two totalitarian regimes. Many contain graphic details, and therefore should be accessed by minors only under adult supervision.
Documents available in the repository should be interpreted using the methods and tools of historical research. The contents of the depositions were affected by the circumstances in which they were made, as well as by the differing intentions of interviewers and interviewees. Sometimes, human memory proved fallible, while not all proceedings in which witnesses were heard ended in convictions.
On 26 February 2022 – two days after the Russian aggression – the Pilecki Institute established the Raphael Lemkin Center for Documenting Russian Crimes in Ukraine. In February 2023, we commenced the regular publication of questionnaires, filmed accounts, photographs and films documenting Russian crimes against Ukrainian civilians in the “Chronicles of Terror” database. For safety reasons, full access to these materials is possible only in the reading rooms of the Library of the Pilecki Institute in Warsaw in Berlin after obtaining necessary permissions.
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