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The images
are divided into four periods:
Images 1: Before The Storm
The election of
1932, the opening of the first camp at Dachau in 1933, and a gradual political
and social storm starts. Featuring the art of A. Paul Weber.
Images 1: It Starts
Kristallnacht, the
dehumanization of medieval symbols to be worn, more and more camps, as refugees
try to flee for safety.
Images 2: Shoah
Shoah, a Hebrew word for
catastrophe. Images from the camps and Eastern Europe.
Images 2: Liberation
What the world
found: the survivors and a challenge to remember.
- The Election of 1932
- Hitler's Campaign
- 1932 Poster from Hitler's and
Hindenburg's campaign. Rough translation: "Fight with us for Peace and Equal
Rights". Source: Dachau Memorial Museum
- SPD Campaign Poster
- Social
Democrats, the Worker's Party, poster. Source: Dachau Memorial Museum
- Hitler's First Government
- Only three of the 11
ministers elected to the first Hitler cabinet were NSDAP members. Source:
Dachau Memorial Museum
Propaganda and the First Camps - The
Sturmer
- 1934 issue of the newspaper The Sturmer, which names the Jews
as ritual murderers of non-Jews. The lies of this famous issue brought protest
driven by the headlines: "Jewish Murder Programme Against Non-Jewish Humanity
Unveiled" and at the bottom, "The Jews are our Downfall!". Source: Dachau
Memorial Museum.
- Public Poster
- An
anti-semitic sign: "Recognize the true enemy with the yellow star." Source:
Dachau Memorial Museum
- Himmler at Dachau
- The leader of the SS visits
the Dachau camp, a model for other camps, in 1936. Dachau opened in 1933.
Source: Dachau Memorial Museum.
- Standing
Punishment
- Prisoners were forced to stand for hours as punishment in
the camps. Source: Dachau Memorial Museum
An Artist's View: A.
Paul Weber
- Paul Weber's work speaks for itself. Source: A. Paul
Weber, Hamburg, and the Dachau Memorial Museum.
- "A German Destiny" 1932
- "The Swamp" 1933
- "Public Enemy" 1933
- "Prisoner" 1934
- "Resistance" 1934
- "Speak up now if you can" 1933
- "Speculating on heroic death" 1934
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It Starts
- A Jewish Family is Taken Away
- A family in
Amsterdam is taken from their homes. Their destination might be a ghetto or a
concentration camp. Source: Dachau Memorial Museum
- Prisoners at Work
- The early camps were
primarily for slave labor. Prisoners built the camps, provided construction
labor, worked in administration, worked outdoors in quarries and sand gravel
pits, or worked in armaments factories. Source: Dachau Memorial Museum.
- Pushing to Survive Source: Dachau Memorial Museum
- Jewish Prisoners
- A photo of Jewish
prisoners in 1938. Source: Dachau Memorial Museum
Refugees
Escape from Germany required a visa. Getting out became
harder as the Thirties came to a close.
- A
Refugee
- Shanghai Visa with Chinese symbol for Jew
- The only place that didn't require a visa to enter. Problem was, you still
needed a visa to get out. Source: The Fugu Plan by Martin Tokayer
Symbols
These are symbols that the Nazis forced people to wear to indicate their
identity, as well as some from the various workgroups in the ghettoes.
- Categories and Marks for Prisoners
- 33
variations for Dachau prisoners which were sewed onto their clothing. Categories
across the top include: Political, Professional Criminals, Emigrants, Jehovah's
Witnesses, Homosexuals, Asocials. On the side: Basic color, multiple offenders,
prisoners in punishment battalions, Jews, along with special badges for racial
law violations and nationalities.
- Yellow Stars of David for Jews
- Sanitats Dienst: Sanitation Worker in the ghetto
- Blue Arm Band from Ghetto Police
- Ghetto Star
- Ghetto Worker
Source for these: The Write Thing videotape of Yad Vashem.
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