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Why Was Auschwitz Such A Well Known Concentration Camp

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Why was Auschwitz such a well-known concentration camp? Auschwitz was a well-known concentration and death camp because of its combined extermination center and forced labor camp. Auschwitz was said to have the most death rates out of all the concentration camps because it was the most notorious out of the six other camps. Auschwitz had a lot of combined extermination centers. This was where they were sent when they were sick or if they were a man. Men were sent away first to Auschwitz because they didn’t want them to revolt. The combined parts of the centers were where they combined all the extermination centers around and made it to a bigger one. Now, some of these centers had different ways they approached killing them. “Nazi state were exterminated, often in gas chambers. Some prisoners were also subjected to barbaric medical experiments led by Josef Mengele” (History.com Editors). “Auschwitz was also a killing center and played a central role in the German effort to …show more content…

This was mostly girls, they were assigned an assortment of different jobs around the camp. They worked long hours with little to no food and sleep. “Those deemed fit to work were employed as slave labor in the production of munitions, synthetic rubber, and other products considered essential to Germany’s efforts in World War II” (History.com Ediotrs). Then once these girls became sick and weak, they were sent to be executed. Auschwitz was known to be the biggest of the six concentration camps. It was also deemed a death camp later on, due to its insane amount of deaths. “According to some estimates, between 1.1 million to 1.5 million people, the vast majority of the Jews died at Auschwitz during its years of operation” (Berenbaum). It became a death camp due to its location, which was right by the rail lines. Hitler said “His “Jewish problem” would be solved only with the elimination of every Jew in his domain” (History.com

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