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Thứ Sáu, 29 tháng 7, 2016

Auschwitz: a living symbol of man's inhumanity to man

Auschwitz: a living symbol of man's inhumanity to man

(Vatican Radio) During his Apostolic Voyage to Poland, Pope Francis, following in the footsteps of his predecessors Pope St John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI, will pay a visit to the Auschwitz-Birkenau memorial and museum, the site of a former Nazi concentration and extermination camp.
Lydia O’Kane is in Poland with Pope Francis. She visited Auschwitz earlier this week, and filed this reflection:
A steady stream of young people passes through metal detectors, making their way to Auschwitz I and through the infamous entrance that reads “Arbeit macht frei” — “work sets you free”. Many will have studied at school the horrors that took place here at this former Nazi concentration camp, but it is only by coming to this place of terror that you can truly comprehend the full extent of the brutality that took place.
From 1940 until the camp was liberated 1,100,000 people were murdered at Auschwitz, the majority were Jews but also Poles, Roma, as well as other nationalities, perished. The prisoners here were housed in red brick block buildings, in sub-human conditions. Walking past them from the outside today they don’t give much away about their terrible past, but look closer and there are clues. On one of the blocks an inscription reads, “Extermination of European Roma”. One of the most infamous blocks here at Auschwitz is Block 11, also known as the death block. It was here that Franciscan priest Fr Maximillian Kolbe was killed by lethal injection after offering up his life for a complete stranger.
Continuing along the guided route there is the stark realization that you are walking in the footsteps of those many prisoners whose fate was sealed the moment they came here. The silence is deafening as one’s imagination tries to make sense of the stories of suffering and hardship.
All around the camp there are photos and drawings that tell a story more poignant than any words, drawings of prisoners being shot or living in overcrowded conditions. One picture even shows the camp orchestra playing as the prisoners file past; it was thought that the music would keep them in step and make it easier for them to be counted by guards.
At Auschwitz II Birkenau the horror escalated. Seventy-five percent of people who came here were murdered in the gas chambers. It is in this purpose-built concentration camp that you see the train tracks that led only one way and those chilling carriages that transported terrified men, women, and children here following their deportation. Only the fittest survived; the elderly, handicapped, and even pregnant women were given no chance at all.
A photo outside one of the blocks, taken by the Nazis, shows the guards making the choice between who lives and who dies. An old man is among the group waiting to hear his fate. One guard can be seen talking to the man and his shadow is clearly visible in the sunlight. In this dark outline the guard’s hand is raised. It is pointing in the direction of the gas chamber.
This tour ends in the worst of places here, the gas chambers. They are now only burnt out shells, having been destroyed by the Nazis just before the Soviet liberation. As you stand looking at them, it’s very difficult to even contemplate just what happened here and as you look around you can see people just standing and staring in disbelief.
The mood of the young people has altered now from what it was at the beginning of this tour, it is a more sombre tone befitting what they have witnessed. As they leave, there is a chance to look at the monument and plaques in 20 languages which commemorate the victims of Auschwitz Birkenau, a living symbol of man’s inhumanity to man.


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