Torture, words used only in movies. You do not think it will happen in the real world. But in Auschwitz, people are facing torture and worse: death. Most people know that Auschwitz concentration camp is one of the most deadly concentration camps. But what some people do not know is that the Auschwitz concentration camp is an extermination camp. Millions of people as well as Jews died in the camp due to the massive killing of the Nazis. Auschwitz's life is what people call hell a living being. The only way out of camp is to die.
In the summer of 1944, as a teenager of Hungary, Elie Wiesel and his father, mother and sister were exiled to the Auschwitz concentration camp in Poland occupied by the Nazis. Upon arrival, Wiesel and his father were chosen as slavery by Dr. Josef Mengele and worked at the nearby Buna Rubber Factory. In April 1945, Wessel was released by the US military. After the war he moved to Paris to become a journalist and later settled in New York. Since 1976, he is Professor Andrew Mellon of the Boston University Humanities Department. He has won numerous awards including the 1986 Nobel Peace Prize and the Presidential Freedom Medal. He is also the founding chairman of the American Holocaust Memorial. Wessel is writing over 40 books including "night" which is a tragic record of his first genocide experience in the 1960s.
The Auschwitz concentration camp was a network of concentration camps and extinction camps founded and operated by Nazi Germany in Poland occupied during the Second World War. This includes Auschwitz I (the original concentration camp), Auschwitz II - Birkenau (central colony / extinction camp), Auschwitz III - Monowitz (labor camp using IG Farben's factory), and 45 Of satellite camps. Auschwitz I originally came for Polish prisoners in Poland and arrived in May 1940. The extinction of the first prisoners in September 1941. Auschwitz II - Birkenau continued the Nazi as the main place to eventually solve the Jewish problem. Problems during the massacre. From the beginning of 1942 until the end of 1944, transportation trains carried the Jews from various parts of Europe to the gas chambers of the camp, where they were killed together with the cyanide-based poison Zyklon B developed as an insecticide.