On Auschwitz

By: Auschwitz Memorial
  • Summary

  • The official podcast of the Auschwitz Memorial. The history of Auschwitz is exceptionally complex. It combined two functions: a concentration camp and an extermination center. Nazi Germany persecuted various groups of people there, and the camp complex continually expanded and transformed itself. In the podcast "On Auschwitz," we discuss the details of the history of the camp as well as our contemporary memory of this important and special place. We kindly ask you to support our mission and share our podcast in social media. Online lessons: http://lesson.auschwitz.org
    Auschwitz Memorial
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Episodes
  • "On Auschwitz" (52): Doctor Josef Mengele and his experiments in the camp
    Nov 29 2024

    Josef Mengele was a doctor of medicine and philosophy, an assistant to Prof. Otmar von Verschuer in the Institute for Hereditary Biology and Racial Hygiene in Frankfurt, member of the Nazi Party and the SS.

    In Auschwitz, he was the chief physician in the Roma and Sinti Family Camp in Birkenau, and from August to December 1944, he was also the chief physician of the entire Birkenau camp.

    Mengele was responsible for the experiments on human heredity. He was never punished for his crimes. Dr Agnieszka Kita from the Archives of the Muzeum talks about Josef Mengele.

    English voiceover: Therese McLaughlin

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    Online lesson on medicine in Auschwitz: https://lekcja.auschwitz.org/2022_medycyna_en/

    Listen to the podcast about medicine in Auschwitz: https://open.spotify.com/episode/2s2Jb91u55L6s80XUlq5JW?si=8kHYPgQXS1mIwabnrRaNqg

    The podcast on experiments: https://open.spotify.com/episode/2Ij4icZ6kicc96gWL3f3y0?si=_VwpbejMRiOOhvmIxmBdUA


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    40 mins
  • "On Auschwitz" (51): Illegal letters sent by Auschwitz prisoners
    Oct 31 2024

    Prisoners of Auschwitz were able to send various types of illegal messages—both within the camp and outside the barbed wire fences. Some were short letters addressed to family members; others were messages and reports for underground resistance organizations. Dr. Wojciech Płosa, the head of the Auschwitz Museum Archives, discusses this unique collection of documents.

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    19 mins
  • "On Auschwitz" (50): Official correspondence of prisoners of Auschwitz
    Sep 15 2024

    Nazi Germany deported some 1,3 million people to Auschwitz. Only a little above 400 thousand were registered in the camp as prisoners. Some could conduct correspondence with the outside world, however it had a unique character.

    Dr. Wojciech Płosa, the head of the Archives of the Museum talks about official prisoners’ correspondence: letters and postcards sent out from the camp and sent to the camp by their relatives.

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    25 mins

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Very informative and interesting

After watching ‘Zone of Interest’ I wanted to find out more. This podcast gives an amazing and heartbreaking insight into life in the camps. There is a good balance of historical information as well as personal accounts of people who were imprisoned there

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Excellent podcast

a very well presented podcast covering specific aspects of Auschwitz, using both personal accounts and historical documents. Very informative and very moving without being at all sentimental or sensationalist.

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