for the children deported from Buchenwald to Auschwitz
to remember their names, to remember them as persons
to recover a small bit of their life story
to support the local initiative Gedenksteine - Buchenwaldbahn
It was a great experience and practical work!
We are an international group of 22 people from Germany, Poland and Romania. We've gathered at the former concentration camp Buchenwald, to learn what happened during Nazi times and fight against present discrimination. With this blog, we want to share our impressions and feelings with you!
Tuesday, 30 June 2015
Third day - starting the practical work!
We were very happy to actually contribute to the maintenance and development of the Buchenwald memorial path!
It is the path that marks the former railway linking Buchenwald to Weimar.
It is a historical reference point, a symbolic path and a commemoration ritual - this is why it is important.
We thank the local initiatives supporting it and doing the regular maintenance work for it!
Third day - the memorial for Sinti and Roma
For the Roma who were killed at Buchenwald - most of them children and youth.
What do you know about the history of Roma in Europe?
Third day - memorial stones in the camp
Did you know that all humans, when they are healthy, have the same temperature of their blood?
It is 37 degrees.
The memorial stone for all the people who were killed in Buchenwald has this temperature - to symbolize we are all the same, all human.
Third day - entering the camp
When entering the concentration camp Buchenwald, we discussed about the complex Nazi system of separating people and putting them in categories, in order to break them and to make them compete with each other for survival.
In this situation, staying human, trying to act in solidarity, were huge forms of resistance.
How is the situation in the world today? How difficult is it to act in solidarity? Is it still difficult for some people/ groups to stay human?
Third day - morning
Today we researched photos and drawings about the history of Buchenwald
- the perspectives of different inmates,
- drawing made by inmates as a form of resistance and
staying alive,
- the photos of SS troops,
- photos from the period after the liberation
We realized there are so many life stories linked to Buchenwald.
And that for most of the inmates the situation was so harsh,
losing their dear ones, their identity, their power, their hopes, their
posibility to be human. And, for tens of thousands, losing their life.
Monday, 29 June 2015
Second day - evening
We found out that the railway has been built through the slave labour of the camp inmates, many of them working to exhaustion and death.
One of the functions of the railway was to support the Gustloff Werke factory, producing weapons and using Buchenwald inmates as slave laborers.
Second day - afternoon
We went into more detail on
- how the Nazi system was organized,
- how the concentration camps were set,
- how Buchenwald was developed,
- how forced labour from concentration camp inmates was taking place almost in all entreprises
- the connections between the Holocaust, forced labour, the concentration camps and the everyday society.
In order to understand these connections, we went to the neighbouring city of Weimar.
Second Day - in the morning
We've met the entire project team, gathered from Bucharest, Wroclaw, Apolda, Berlin, Jena.
We've talked about our personal interests, our languages, our histories and how our personal family histories combine into the "big history".
Sunday, 28 June 2015
First Day
We were hosted on the site of the former concentration camp Buchenwald.
On our way, we have read materials about Buchenwald,
the Memorial and its exhibitions. We have discussed a bit about the history of
the area and about the present day situation.
We had the 1st round of interviews about our motives to be
part of the project and we have made our 1st photo selection - to illustrate
our experience and feelings of the day.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)