The youngest victims of Auschwitz

The fate of pregnant women and children during the evacuation march by Auschwitz prisoners in January 1945.

Helena Kubica, We should never forget them. The youngest victims of Auschwitz, Multimedia CD-Rom, Oświęcim 2005

Sick and pregnant women, without even elementary medical care, trudged along at the back of a column of exhausted female prisoners who were marched out Birkenau barracks. These miserable, suffering human skeletons, dressed in inadequate clothing, hungry for months, pressing loaves of rough black bread under their arms, trudge plodded with great difficulty through the snowdrifts. They stumbled frequently over the frozen, snow-covered corpses of prisoners.

I remember that we were coming to a settlement in the evening of the first day. The dark shape of a hill rose before us, and at top of it a lighted house.

We suddenly heard the shrieks of a prisoner seized by birth pangs. Unable to go on, she climbed down into the ditch and sat there. Dread came over us. We could do nothing to help her, because we had nothing, and besides that, stopping was forbidden. The pregnant woman's mother wanted to stay with her while she gave birth, but an SS man shoved her away and she returned in despair to the column.

A young girl - prisoner of Auschwitz-Birkenau Camp

My friend Helena Pachecka, number 88202, and I were hoping that the pregnant woman would stay in the ditch and crawl under cover of darkness to the nearby house, where she might find someone to help her.

But the malevolent Nazis would not give even a mother in labor a chance. When we had gone a dozen or so steps further, we heard shots. The SS man had murdered the mother and the baby in her womb. This was something horrible for all of us, but especially for those who were pregnant.

Source: Archives of the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum. Zespół Oświadczenia, t. 91, k. 10. Relacja byłej więźniarki KL Auschwitz nr 87947 Aliny Cielemięckiej-Naciążek, która (sama ciężarna)została dołączona została do marszu pieszego.

In the evening of January 18, the dull thud of artillery on the front lines was distinctly audible in the distance. They marched our column to the Auschwitz I camp. There were adults mixed in with us. We passed the guardhouse near the gate along the way. They were setting the records of the murdered people alight; they were burning the death register. In a cold, starry January night, we set out on our procession of death westward along the roads of Silesia, escorted by SS men alongside us carrying rifles. After a couple of kilometers we started passing the corpses of murdered women at the roadside. Women were marching ahead of us. They killed the weak along the way.

We walked along with grown-ups until morning, scurrying to keep up all the time because the head of the column was setting a good pace. We kept tramping our frozen feet to warm them up. I was wearing rubber-soled canvas shoes and they were stiff, icy and soaked through with snow. Later, we walked arm in arm because we knew what it meant to lag behind. An older boy I knew had a tragic situation: his father could not go on. For a long time, we took turns dragging him. On the end, he insisted on staying where he was in the middle of the road. We heard increasingly frequent rifle shots from the tail of the procession.

We kept marching till morning. To this day I can still see the horrifying spectacle of a woman lying across the road with her head blown apart. We had to jump, but the army vehicles drove right over her.

After walking all day they herded us late in the evening into a large barn where, deathly tired, we slept like stones. It was still dark when they roused us back onto the road in the morning. I had a lot of trouble putting my frozen shoes back on. It cost me a real effort. And again the long procession of beggars struggled along the snowy Silesian road all day, pausing for only two or three short breaks. We spent another night at a farmstead and started off again at dawn.

A boy - prisoner of Auschwitz-Birkenau Camp

In the afternoon, we reached a small train station, probably Wodzisław, and here, after covering about 80 kilometers on foot, they shoved us 100 at a time into open coal cars. Only late at night did the transport begin to move, but it hadn't gone far when it stopped for a short time, and then it continued rolling in the opposite direction for a couple of hours. The next day, the train didn't cover a single kilometer. At night, it repeated the previous escapade. Following day the situation was the same.

We realized what a tragic situation we were in. Many of us did not have a bite of bread left. SS men walked along the wagons asking "How many dead?" We wondered whether it would be better to jump off the train and die from bullets than to starve to death. Finally, the train moved during the night and on the morning of the seventh day of the evacuation, we stopped at Bogumin, a larger station in Czechoslovakia. The residents of the city tossed several loaves of bread into the coal car, which was just what we needed to keep our strength up. That day, the train ran full speed ahead, our spirits improved, and after several hours we were in Austrian territory.

The train reached Mauthausen station in the afternoon of January 25, 1945. We climbed out of the coal car with difficulty and walked through the city on the hard uphill road to the camp, spat on and bombarded with snowballs by brown-shirted youngsters from the Hitlerjugend.

Source: Lech Szawłowski, Z przeżyć warszawskich dzieci w obozach hitlerowskich. "Przegląd Lekarski - Oświęcim" 1972 nr 1, ss. 161-162. Wspomnienia 12-letniego chłopca Leszka Szawłowskiego, byłego więźnia obozów koncentracyjnych: Auschwitz-Birkenau nr 192799, Mauthausen i Melk.


Photos: The children liberated in KL Auschwitz on 27.01.1945. The photographs were taken immediately after the liberation of the camp, showing the saved children, the remaining camp buildings and objects related to their fate, and items that belonged to the murdered children.

These photographs were taken in Birkenau by an anonymous Soviet camera operator between the end of January and the beginning of February 1945. They show unidentified children in Barrack 2, Sector BIIe. Before the liberation most of the children in this barrack were Jewish.  There were also some Poles and Russians (see following documents).  The photographs come from the Main Commission for the Investigation of German Crimes in Poland and the Institute of National Memory (IPN). These photographs were taken in Birkenau by an anonymous Soviet camera operator between the end of January and the beginning of February 1945. They show unidentified children in Barrack 2, Sector BIIe. Before the liberation most of the children in this barrack were Jewish.  There were also some Poles and Russians (see following documents).  The photographs come from the Main Commission for the Investigation of German Crimes in Poland and the Institute of National Memory (IPN). These photographs were taken in Birkenau by an anonymous Soviet camera operator between the end of January and the beginning of February 1945. They show unidentified children in Barrack 2, Sector BIIe. Before the liberation most of the children in this barrack were Jewish.  There were also some Poles and Russians (see following documents).  The photographs come from the Main Commission for the Investigation of German Crimes in Poland and the Institute of National Memory (IPN). These photographs were taken in Birkenau by an anonymous Soviet camera operator between the end of January and the beginning of February 1945. They show unidentified children in Barrack 2, Sector BIIe. Before the liberation most of the children in this barrack were Jewish.  There were also some Poles and Russians (see following documents).  The photographs come from the Main Commission for the Investigation of German Crimes in Poland and the Institute of National Memory (IPN).
These photographs were taken in Birkenau by an anonymous Soviet camera operator between the end of January and the beginning of February 1945. They show unidentified children in Barrack 2, Sector BIIe. Before the liberation most of the children in this barrack were Jewish.  There were also some Poles and Russians (see following documents).  The photographs come from the Main Commission for the Investigation of German Crimes in Poland and the Institute of National Memory (IPN). These photographs were taken in Birkenau by an anonymous Soviet camera operator between the end of January and the beginning of February 1945. They show unidentified children in Barrack 2, Sector BIIe. Before the liberation most of the children in this barrack were Jewish.  There were also some Poles and Russians (see following documents).  The photographs come from the Main Commission for the Investigation of German Crimes in Poland and the Institute of National Memory (IPN). These photographs were taken in Birkenau by an anonymous Soviet camera operator between the end of January and the beginning of February 1945. They show unidentified children in Barrack 2, Sector BIIe. Before the liberation most of the children in this barrack were Jewish.  There were also some Poles and Russians (see following documents).  The photographs come from the Main Commission for the Investigation of German Crimes in Poland and the Institute of National Memory (IPN). These photographs were taken in Birkenau by an anonymous Soviet camera operator between the end of January and the beginning of February 1945. They show unidentified children in Barrack 2, Sector BIIe. Before the liberation most of the children in this barrack were Jewish.  There were also some Poles and Russians (see following documents).  The photographs come from the Main Commission for the Investigation of German Crimes in Poland and the Institute of National Memory (IPN).
These photographs were taken in Birkenau by an anonymous Soviet camera operator between the end of January and the beginning of February 1945. They show unidentified children in Barrack 2, Sector BIIe. Before the liberation most of the children in this barrack were Jewish.  There were also some Poles and Russians (see following documents).  The photographs come from the Main Commission for the Investigation of German Crimes in Poland and the Institute of National Memory (IPN). The condition of the female prisoners and children in particular barracks in the women's camp in Birkenau (Sector BIIe) on 26.01.1945.  A page of the record kept by prisoner Stanisława Jankowska between 17 and 27.01.1945.  She had been chosen by the other prisoner's as the women's camp supervisor (Lagerälteste). Katarzyna Beer/Katarina Beerová - Jew from Slovakia, b. 30.01.1937, in Zvolen.  Before deportation to the camp she lived with her family in Bratislava.  She was sent to KL Auschwitz on 03.11.1944, with her mother Magdalena and father Pavel in a transport of Slovakian Jews from the camp in Sered.  It was the first transport to arrive in KL Auschwitz after the order had been given to stop the mass extermination of Jews in the gas chambers.  Thus, all prisoners in the transport, 900 men, women and children, were sent to the camp without selection at the unloading ramp.  The girl was given the number A-26857, and the mother A-26856.  The mother was transferred from KL Auschwitz to KL Lippstadt, a sub-camp of KL Buchenwald, in November 1944.  From there she returned home after the war.  Her father died.  The photograph was taken at the end of January 1945, by a Soviet camera operator at the former Birkenau camp. Katarzyna Beer in front of a barrack in Birkenau in Sector BIIe, where she was liberated.  The photograph was taken at the end of January 1945.
 Iwan Dudnik - Russian, aged 15, at the time of liberation.  He suffered psychological problems as a result of his imprisonment in the camp.  The photograph was taken on 14.02.1945, by the Russian camera operator Mazelew.  The original is in the Russian National Archive of Cinematic-Documents, in Krasnogorsk. Jiři Steiner - Czech Jew, who recognized himself in the photograph in the group of liberated prisoners, in the first row on the right.  He was born 20.05.1929, in Prague.  He was deported to KL Auschwitz with his twin-brother Zdenek and parents in September 1943.  They were sent to the family camp for Jews from Theresienstadt (Sector BIIb).  In the camp the boys were victim to the criminal experiments of the SS Doctor Josef Mengele.  They were not, therefore, murdered during the first stage of the liquidation of this camp, in March 1944.  Their parents died on 08.03.1944, in the gas chambers.  At the time of liberation, 15-year-old Jiři weighed 8kg and was 130cm tall.  After the liberation, in March 1945, the boys returned to Czechoslovakia.  The photograph was taken immediately after the Soviet soldiers entered the main camp, Auschwitz I. Prisoners - adults and children leaving the camp in Birkenau.  The photograph comes from the documentary film chronicle of the liberation of KL Auschwitz-Birkenau, recorded by operators of the First Ukrainian Front.
Oleg Mandić (on the left) - Yugoslavian, b. 05.04.1933, in Susak, deported to KL Auschwitz on 14.07.1944, with his mother Newenka and grandmother Olga (also pictured) in a transport of prisoners from Triest.  They were arrested because his father and grandfather were active partisans of J. B. Tito.  Additionally, the father, Dr.  Oleg Mandić was a member of the Yugoslavian government.  In the camp the boy was given the number 89488, the mother 82605, and the grandmother 82606.  In March, by the personal order of Nikołaj A.  Bułganin, a member of the USSR Defense Council, they were transported to Cracow, then to Moscow by plane, and handed over to the Yugoslavian mission. Liberated children in Birkenau.  The photographs come from the documentary film chronicle and the collection of the Military Medicine Museum in Saint Petersburg.  They were taken between the end of February and the beginning of March 1945, on the site of the former main camp, Auschwitz I, by the camera crew of the First Ukrainian Front.
Liberated children in Birkenau.  The photographs come from the documentary film chronicle and the collection of the Military Medicine Museum in Saint Petersburg.  They were taken between the end of February and the beginning of March 1945, on the site of the former main camp, Auschwitz I, by the camera crew of the First Ukrainian Front. Liberated children in Birkenau.  The photographs come from the documentary film chronicle and the collection of the Military Medicine Museum in Saint Petersburg.  They were taken between the end of February and the beginning of March 1945, on the site of the former main camp, Auschwitz I, by the camera crew of the First Ukrainian Front. Liberated children in Birkenau.  The photographs come from the documentary film chronicle and the collection of the Military Medicine Museum in Saint Petersburg.  They were taken between the end of February and the beginning of March 1945, on the site of the former main camp, Auschwitz I, by the camera crew of the First Ukrainian Front.
Liberated children in Birkenau.  The photographs come from the documentary film chronicle and the collection of the Military Medicine Museum in Saint Petersburg.  They were taken between the end of February and the beginning of March 1945, on the site of the former main camp, Auschwitz I, by the camera crew of the First Ukrainian Front. Liberated children in Birkenau.  The photographs come from the documentary film chronicle and the collection of the Military Medicine Museum in Saint Petersburg.  They were taken between the end of February and the beginning of March 1945, on the site of the former main camp, Auschwitz I, by the camera crew of the First Ukrainian Front. Liberated children in Birkenau.  The photographs come from the documentary film chronicle and the collection of the Military Medicine Museum in Saint Petersburg.  They were taken between the end of February and the beginning of March 1945, on the site of the former main camp, Auschwitz I, by the camera crew of the First Ukrainian Front.
Liberated children in Birkenau.  The photographs come from the documentary film chronicle and the collection of the Military Medicine Museum in Saint Petersburg.  They were taken between the end of February and the beginning of March 1945, on the site of the former main camp, Auschwitz I, by the camera crew of the First Ukrainian Front. Henryk Sytner - Jew from Poland, b. 29.01.1937, in Kalisz, sent to KL Auschwitz on 31.07.1943, along with his father Leon and mother Leokadia from the labor camp for Jews in Pionki. In the camp he was given the number B-1157, and he saw the liberation in KL Auschwitz.  His father was transferred to KL Gross-Rosen where he died.  His mother survived the evacuation of the camp and returned to Poland in 1946. Henryk Sytner, (on the right in the second row, the boy in a cap), among the liberated children
The girl on the left is probably Tova Grossman - a Jew from Tomaszów Mazowieck, Poland, at the age of about 6.  She was deported to KL Auschwitz on 30.07.1944, from the labor camp for Jews in Starachowice.  The boy on the right in the last row may be Mano Adler (now: Marck Berkovitz) - a Czech Jew, b. 15.02.1932, deported to KL Auschwitz in April 1944, from Slatynsky Dolly near Sighet, with his mother, twin sister Feige (Fanny) and other distant relatives.  In the camp he was given the number A-7739, and his sister A-6029.  He and his sister were both subjected to the experiments of SS Doctor Josef Mengele.  His mother died in KL Auschwitz. Alice Ziemlich (in the headscarf), b. 13.03.1930, and Gertruda Mangel, b. 14.08.1932.  Jews from Slovakia, deported to KL Auschwitz on 03.11.1944, from Sered.  Alice was given the number A-27218, and Gertruda number A-27165.  In the camp Gertruda was punished by the so-called The frostbitten feet of Alice Ziemlich and Gertruda Mangel.
One of the Lustig-Braver triplets, Jews from Hungary, b. 22.12.1942.  In the camp the sisters were given the following numbers: Eva  No. A-5121, Agnes No. A-5122, and Judith No.  A-5123.  The sisters were deported to KL Auschwitz in May 1944, with their mother Ester, in a transport of Hungarian Jews.  In the camp they were subjected to medical experiments by SS Doctor Josef Mengele.  Eva died as a result of these criminal experiments.  Agnes died soon after the liberation, on 04.04.1945, in the Polish Red Cross Hospital.  Only Judith and her mother survived.  After a medical examination the girl was diagnosed as suffering from third degree emaciation and whopping cough (pertussis).  It is likely Agnes in this photograph.   Child, of approximately 2 years of age, of unidentified gender and nationality, liberated in the camp. Josef Hajman or Tajman - Jew from Slovakia, 4 years old.  He was deported to KL Auschwitz on 03.11.1944, from Sered.  In the camp he was given the number B-14095.  After the liberation the boy was diagnosed as suffering from second degree emaciation, scurvy, and internal hemorrhaging.  He died on 30.03.1945.   Benkel (Benkiel) Feinod or Fajwel - Jew from Poland, at the age of 17.  He was deported to KL Auschwitz in August 1944, from Łódź.  On 21.08.1944, he was given the number B-7576.  During quarantine he was imprisoned in the transit camp for Jews (Sector BIIe).  There he was shot in the head by a guard because he went too close to the camp fence to give a piece of bread to a woman from another sector of the camp.  After the liberation and a medical examination he was diagnosed as suffering from central paralysis of right-side, of the arm and the leg.
Benkel (Benkiel) Feinod or Fajwel - Jew from Poland, at the age of 17.  He was deported to KL Auschwitz in August 1944, from Łódź.  On 21.08.1944, he was given the number B-7576.  During quarantine he was imprisoned in the transit camp for Jews (Sector BIIe).  There he was shot in the head by a guard because he went too close to the camp fence to give a piece of bread to a woman from another sector of the camp.  After the liberation and a medical examination he was diagnosed as suffering from central paralysis of right-side, of the arm and the leg. Judith Rosenbaum - Jew from Hungary, b. 25.03.1934, deported to KL Auschwitz on 01.06.1944, with her twin sister Ruth.  She was selected, as were other twins, as experimental material for SS Doctor Josef Mengele.  In the camp, Judith was given the number A-7055, and Ruth number A-7054.  Both sisters saw the liberation, but on 23.03.1945, Ruth died of complications after her feet were amputated.  They had been punished by Paweł (Pałko) Blum - Czech Jew, b. 1938, deported to KL Auschwitz on 03.11.1944, with his parents from Sered.  In the camp he was given the number B-13979, and his father Juliusz number B-13980.  The number of his mother, Jana, is unknown.  His mother was transferred to a camp in Germany, from where she most likely did not return.  Paweł and his father were liberated in KL Auschwitz. István (Stephen) Bleyer - Jew from Hungary, b. 22.11.1930, in Komádi.  He was deported to KL Auschwitz on 01.07.1944, from the Nagyvárad ghetto, in a transport of Hungarian Jews.  In the camp he was given the number B-14615.
Corpse of an unidentified child.  The photograph was taken at the Birkenau camp, directly after the liberation in January/February 1945. Pictures taken during autopsies in the spring of 1945, conducted by the Soviet and Polish Commissions for the Investigation of German Crimes in Poland. Pictures taken during autopsies in the spring of 1945, conducted by the Soviet and Polish Commissions for the Investigation of German Crimes in Poland. Pictures taken during autopsies in the spring of 1945, conducted by the Soviet and Polish Commissions for the Investigation of German Crimes in Poland.
Pictures taken during autopsies in the spring of 1945, conducted by the Soviet and Polish Commissions for the Investigation of German Crimes in Poland. Corpse of a mother with her baby in a mass grave.  One frame from the film chronicle documenting the liberation of the camp.


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The youth about the past and the future; Idea: Stefan Wilkanowicz; Elaboration: Maria Osterwa-Czekaj;
design: Marcin Gajownik, Marek Tobolewski; translation: Justyna Piątkowska-Osińska, Tomasz Ponikło (English), Katarzyna Kopeć (German), Andrzej Rynkar, Eliza Kasprzak (French), PRZEKŁADY.PL (Russian).
We used: photo service "Köln 2005" (Centrum Dialogu i Modlitwy w Oświęcimiu),
Helena Kubica "Nie wolno o nich zapomnieć" (Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum, Oświęcim 2005),
"Ludzie dobrej Woli" pod red. Henryka Świebockiego (Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum, Oświęcim 2005),
Leszek Stafiński's movies archive (Kraków).

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