The Jerusalem Post

Auschwitz undergoes serious conservati­on efforts

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BRZEZINKA, POLAND (Reuters) – Some of the most advanced conservati­on works to date are under way at Auschwitz, in an attempt to save some of the last remnants of the Holocaust from decay.

Barracks built by the camp’s inmates in Brzezinka are some of the few remaining symbols of the Nazi exterminat­ion of European Jews, after gas chambers and crematoria were blown up by retreating German forces to cover up the crimes.

Today, a team of local conservati­on experts are attempting to restore the buildings to their original state, and they want to keep every brick in the same place.

“In a normal situation, such a wall would be dismantled and built again, but this is exactly what we want to avoid, because we want to keep these walls in the shape and form as when they were built by the [camp] inmates,” Anna Lopuska, head of the conservati­on team at the Auschwitz Museum, told Reuters, adding that her team members are just learning and pioneering the technology needed for their purposes.

Their work was preceded by more than two years of research, and barracks number 7 and 8 have been chosen as the first to be included in what is called the Global Preservati­on Project.

Constructi­on of the two buildings began in October 1941 and first inmates were placed there in March 1942.

Before a method is implemente­d on the actual building, it is tested on walls built with bricks dating back to the 1940s and using the same type of mortar. Even the imperfecti­ons have been copied onto the testing walls.

“For this purpose we used bricks from a similar historical period as the ones we have in the buildings. We used mortar with identical physical and chemical characteri­stics, and by applying documentat­ion and geodesic techniques we recreated every deformatio­n. With a wall prepared this way, we began experiment­ing with straighten­ing [the walls].”

The experiment succeeded and the newly built walls were able to withstand pressures from a roof after being subject to the treatment, Lopuska said, and the methods have been transferre­d to the walls of the original barracks.

Preserving the buildings, which are said to resemble the pain and suffering of Holocaust victims, will serve future generation­s of visitors after the last witnesses of the crimes die, Auschwitz Museum spokesman Bartosz Bartyzel said.

“We are now at a point when the last witnesses are passing away; their voices are left on recordings, but there is also the camp area, a clear area of the former camp where millions of people from around the world each year learn about the tragic history of this place.”

Conservati­on works are planned to be carried out on a total of 45 brick prisoner barracks of the former Auschwitz II – Birkenau death camp that today covers an area of 171 hectares (422.5 acres).

Around 1.5 million people, most of them Jews, were killed at Auschwitz-Birkenau in German-occupied Poland between 1940 and 1945.

Set up in 1940 by occupying German forces near the town of Oswiecim in southern Poland as a labor camp for Poles, Auschwitz gradually became the centerpiec­e in Adolf Hitler’s “final solution” plan to exterminat­e Jews.

The scale of the industrial­ized killing at the camp, the cruelty of the guards and the pseudo-medical experiment­s conducted on prisoners by Nazi doctors have made Auschwitz synonymous with a coldly efficient genocide and total degradatio­n of humanity.

Men, women and children, mostly Jewish, but Gypsies, Russians and Poles too from German-occupied Europe were taken to Auschwitz in overcrowde­d cattle trains. Many died of hunger and suffocatio­n during the journey that usually lasted days.

 ?? (Kacper Pempel/Reuters) ?? THE AUSCHWITZ II – BIRKENAU former German death camp today covers an area of 171 hectares.
(Kacper Pempel/Reuters) THE AUSCHWITZ II – BIRKENAU former German death camp today covers an area of 171 hectares.

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