On 15 December 2005, the third class "E" and the third "F" in the care of Mrs Kowalska and Kołodziejczyk went on a trip to Auschwitz. The tour started at 6:30 in the bleak and frosty morning, luckily our beloved ladies teacher took care of it for us to have a comfortable and warm bus ride. Around 9:00 am we arrived at Auschwitz, which was a German band camps and death camps. But we got him to the camp we saw a few minutes of video showing people of different nationalities of people who have managed to survive all this "hell". After a brief screening they were all very shocked by what happened to these people and that is why no one moved, and the room was deathly silent. Perhaps it would take a long time, but it was interrupted by Mr teachers and began to dress, to finally go to a cemetery. The entrance to the camp opened the gate, which bore the inscription "Arbeit macht frei" or "work makes you free". In fact, it was not. The one who crossed the threshold of the door had no chance at freedom, waiting for him there only death and all kinds of torture ... One of the letters on the gate ("b" in the word Arbeit) is placed upside down. According to some accounts of prisoners was done specifically as a small act of resistance. According to others, the relationship was just a mistake. Columns of prisoners put to work and returning to the camp often exceed the gate to the sounds of a symphony orchestra camp. There are large numbers of real films depicting Jews column passing through the gate-the vast majority of them arrived in the camp Auschwitz II. The Auschwitz I, some blocks and buildings camp served as special features. We unfortunately could not come to all, as there were in the pipeline. Behind him walked into the first building you guide showed us a face reflected on the glass door. She said it is the curiosity and no one knows how it got there and no way it can not be washed (remove). In each of the buildings there were numerous photographs, they were as people of different ages and in different situations. There were also photographs showing the trains that bring people who would die in the gas chambers. In addition to the photographs there were also various kinds of documents and items of daily use. They were a huge panes of glass. These included piles of shoes, sunglasses, travel bags, pots, toothbrushes and dentures, as well as hair pieces, among which we could see the well-preserved long red braid. Behind one of the windows was a small grille, which depicted a way condemned to the gas chamber. In this room also lay a pile of glass aluminum cans highly poisonous gas "Cyclone B", which had previously been used for disinfection. As previously mentioned, some of the blocks and buildings served as special funkcje.Dziewięć blocks (1,2,3,12,13,14,22,23,24) were screened camp for Soviet prisoners of war. Block 10 was the place of the criminal medical experiments in vivo. be conducted by Dr. Carl Clauberg, who was looking for a quick and cheap method of female sterilization. Blocks 1 to 10 were the first women's camp, which was later transferred to a camp in Birkenau. Block 11 was the inner prison, designed to hold penalties for infringement of the camp. There were, among others, known. standing goals that we could see. They were so small that they locked into them for four people convicted had to remain standing all night, and sometimes by the dozen in a row. We also saw the courtyard of Block 11, which used the so-called. fine columnar. The ground floor housed the objectives of the block where prisoners waited to be shot at the Wall of Death, which was located in the courtyard between blocks 11 and 10 At the end of your guide took us to the crematorium and there thanked us for it, we were very polite and listened carefully to what we wanted to convey. We are also grateful for the way we thanked her for introducing us to the world of World War II and so ended our tour of the great cemetery ...
On 15 December 2005, the third class "E" and the third "F" in the care of Mrs Kowalska and Kołodziejczyk went on a trip to Auschwitz.
The tour started at 6:30 in the bleak and frosty morning, luckily our beloved ladies teacher took care of it for us to have a comfortable and warm bus ride. Around 9:00 am we arrived at Auschwitz, which was a German band camps and death camps. But we got him to the camp we saw a few minutes of video showing people of different nationalities of people who have managed to survive all this "hell". After a brief screening they were all very shocked by what happened to these people and that is why no one moved, and the room was deathly silent. Perhaps it would take a long time, but it was interrupted by Mr teachers and began to dress, to finally go to a cemetery.
The entrance to the camp opened the gate, which bore the inscription "Arbeit macht frei" or "work makes you free". In fact, it was not. The one who crossed the threshold of the door had no chance at freedom, waiting for him there only death and all kinds of torture ...
One of the letters on the gate ("b" in the word Arbeit) is placed upside down. According to some accounts of prisoners was done specifically as a small act of resistance. According to others, the relationship was just a mistake. Columns of prisoners put to work and returning to the camp often exceed the gate to the sounds of a symphony orchestra camp. There are large numbers of real films depicting Jews column passing through the gate-the vast majority of them arrived in the camp Auschwitz II.
The Auschwitz I, some blocks and buildings camp served as special features. We unfortunately could not come to all, as there were in the pipeline. Behind him walked into the first building you guide showed us a face reflected on the glass door. She said it is the curiosity and no one knows how it got there and no way it can not be washed (remove). In each of the buildings there were numerous photographs, they were as people of different ages and in different situations. There were also photographs showing the trains that bring people who would die in the gas chambers. In addition to the photographs there were also various kinds of documents and items of daily use. They were a huge panes of glass. These included piles of shoes, sunglasses, travel bags, pots, toothbrushes and dentures, as well as hair pieces, among which we could see the well-preserved long red braid. Behind one of the windows was a small grille, which depicted a way condemned to the gas chamber. In this room also lay a pile of glass aluminum cans highly poisonous gas "Cyclone B", which had previously been used for disinfection.
As previously mentioned, some of the blocks and buildings served as special funkcje.Dziewięć blocks (1,2,3,12,13,14,22,23,24) were screened camp for Soviet prisoners of war. Block 10 was the place of the criminal medical experiments in vivo. be conducted by Dr. Carl Clauberg, who was looking for a quick and cheap method of female sterilization. Blocks 1 to 10 were the first women's camp, which was later transferred to a camp in Birkenau. Block 11 was the inner prison, designed to hold penalties for infringement of the camp. There were, among others, known. standing goals that we could see. They were so small that they locked into them for four people convicted had to remain standing all night, and sometimes by the dozen in a row. We also saw the courtyard of Block 11, which used the so-called. fine columnar. The ground floor housed the objectives of the block where prisoners waited to be shot at the Wall of Death, which was located in the courtyard between blocks 11 and 10 At the end of your guide took us to the crematorium and there thanked us for it, we were very polite and listened carefully to what we wanted to convey. We are also grateful for the way we thanked her for introducing us to the world of World War II and so ended our tour of the great cemetery ...