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  2. List of victims and survivors of Auschwitz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_victims_and...

    František Getreuer (1906–1945), Czech swimmer and Olympic water polo player, killed in Dachau concentration camp. Hugo Gryn (25 June 1930 – 18 August 1996), senior rabbi, London. Adélaïde Hautval (1 January 1906 – 17 October 1988), French psychiatrist who refused to cooperate with medical experimentation at Auschwitz.

  3. List of Holocaust survivors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Holocaust_survivors

    List of Holocaust survivors. The people on this list are or were survivors of Nazi Germany 's attempt to exterminate the Jewish people in Europe before and during World War II. A state-enforced persecution of Jewish people in Nazi-controlled Europe lasted from the introduction of the Nuremberg Laws in 1935 to Hitler 's defeat in 1945.

  4. Holocaust victims - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holocaust_victims

    Jews delivered to Chełmno death camp were forced to abandon their bundles along the way. In this photo, loading of victims sent from the ghetto in Łódź in 1942. The military campaign to displace persons like the Jews from Germany and other German-held territories during World War II, often with extreme brutality, is known as the Holocaust ...

  5. Holocaust survivors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holocaust_survivors

    Holocaust survivors are people who survived the Holocaust, defined as the persecution and attempted annihilation of the Jews by Nazi Germany and its allies before and during World War II in Europe and North Africa. There is no universally accepted definition of the term, and it has been applied variously to Jews who survived the war in German ...

  6. Nazi concentration camps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazi_concentration_camps

    Many survivors testified about their experiences or wrote memoirs after the war. Some of these accounts have become internationally famous, such as Primo Levi's 1947 book, If This is a Man. [107] The concentration camps have been the subject of historical writings since Eugen Kogon's 1946 study, Der SS-Staat ("The SS State").

  7. Extermination camp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extermination_camp

    Nazi Germany used six extermination camps ( German: Vernichtungslager ), also called death camps ( Todeslager ), or killing centers ( Tötungszentren ), in Central Europe, primarily Occupied Poland, during World War II to systematically murder over 2.7 million people – mostly Jews – in the Holocaust. [ 1][ 2][ 3] The victims of death camps ...

  8. Auschwitz concentration camp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auschwitz_concentration_camp

    In the decades after the war, survivors such as Primo Levi, Viktor Frankl, and Elie Wiesel wrote memoirs of their experiences, and the camp became a dominant symbol of the Holocaust. In 1947, Poland founded the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum on the site of Auschwitz I and II, and in 1979 it was named a World Heritage Site by UNESCO .

  9. Camp de Rivesaltes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camp_de_Rivesaltes

    Between August 11 and October 20, 1942, 2,313 foreign Jews, including 209 children were transferred from Rivesaltes via the Drancy internment camp to the Nazi extermination camp Auschwitz, where they were murdered. Serge Klarsfeld described the camp as the Drancy of the Southern Zone .