Liberation
Soviet soldiers were the first to liberate concentration camp prisoners in
the final stages of the war. On July 23, 1944, they entered the Majdanek
camp in Poland, and later overran several other killing
centers. On January 27, 1945, they entered Auschwitz and there found
hundreds of sick and exhausted prisoners. The Germans had been forced
to leave these prisoners behind in their hasty retreat from the camp.
Also left behind were victims' belongings: 348,820 men's suits, 836,255
women's coats, and tens of thousands of pairs of shoes.
British, Canadian, American, and French troops also freed prisoners
from the camps. The Americans were responsible for liberating Buchenwald and Dachau, while British forces entered Bergen-Belsen. Although the Germans had attempted
to empty the camps of surviving prisoners and hide all evidence of their
crimes, the Allied soldiers came upon thousands of dead bodies "stacked
up like cordwood," according to one American soldier. The prisoners who were still alive were living
skeletons.
Bill Barrett, an American army journalist,
described what he saw at Dachau: "There were about
a dozen bodies in the dirty boxcar, men and women
alike. They had gone without food so long that
their dead wrists were broomsticks tipped with
claws. These were the victims of a deliberate
starvation diet..."
Allied troops, physicians, and relief
workers tried to provide nourishment for the
surviving prisoners, but many of them were too
weak to digest food and could not be saved. In
spite of the liberators' efforts, many camp
survivors died. Half of the prisoners discovered
alive in Auschwitz died within a few days of being
freed.
Survivors had mixed reactions to their newfound
freedom. While a few looked forward to being
reunited with other family members, some felt
guilty for surviving when so many of their
relatives and friends had died. Some felt
overwhelmed, as one survivor, Viktor Frankl, a
psychiatrist, expressed: "Timidly, we looked
around and glanced at each other questioningly.
Then we ventured a few steps out of the camp. This
time no orders were shouted at us, nor was there
any need to duck quickly to avoid a blow or a
kick. 'Freedom,' we repeated to ourselves, and yet
we could not grasp it."
For more information, see "Liberation of Nazi Camps" in the Holocaust Encyclopedia.
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