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-   -   My visit in: Mauthausen (https://www.graalians.com/forums/showthread.php?t=34646)

Vicipower 03-08-2016 10:20 PM

My visit in: Mauthausen
 
Yesterday my class went to Mauthausen.
Now you may wonder what that place may be!

It's a concentration camp.

Since I'm extremely interested in the first but also more the second worldwar, I decided to take a bunch of pictures to share them here! So if youre bored and have nothing better to do, look here pal!

I took about 97 pics with my classmates phone since mine died on the 2 hour busdrive there, she sent them all tonight, PROPS TO YOU ALEX, anyhow I WON'T be posting all of them, need 2 stay on topic!

I also decided to post all that stuff because some people might get interested in this topic, not many people live near a concentration so I thought it'd be interesting to share.

LETS GET MOVING BOYS:

Picture of the camp today:


Picture of the camp in March 1945:


You can clearly see that nowadays there are way less barracks.
If you inspect the old map you can also see a soccer field.
Now the answer to that is very simple;
the SS had their own soccer team.

Heres a picture of their soccer team:


Also have a picture of the soccer field nowadays, the weird hills on the left are where normal austrian citizens sat and watched them play:


The SS soccer team has never lost a match. The reasons why is because most of the locals sure didn't wanted to lose to that "elite group" and the male players that were still left where mostly injured from the war.


Next up we have this horrible rocky way that made my feet hurt for the entire day, the path starts off normal but later on the stones get sharp:


Now you may wonder where that path led to, oh why you ask, to those uneven and really long stairs (did not take this picture because I couldnt get a free view) :


Inmates had to carry over 50kg stoneblocks up those really small stairs every single day under every weather, illness and extreme hunger. On top of all that, every single day SS people shot them and caused them to fall down the cliffs or stairs, often taking many with them down.

Now we went down those stairs even though it was still winter season and weren't allowed to, was very slippery.

On a side-note: I ****ing slipped.

View from the top of the stairs today:



Lets get 2 the worst part of that entire place, starting off with the barracks:


These buildings were seperated into 2 sleeping halls and 2 washrooms.
One hall held 1000 people, I was in there and I can promise you those halls were extremely tiny and smelly.

The washroom:

(yes thats all those washrooms had, unbelievable)

Can you guess what this would be?


Oh.



I have a needle phobia:



Another really stunning but sad thing, they tried to write every single name of those inmates down.
(When inmates arrived they got a number as a name)


What could this be?


...


This book has over 2200 pages, filled with the names of the inmates.
There were three in this room, each one different:


The rest of this thread is simply signs I found:


I hope you were able to pull trough all of this, if you didn't.. well thats alright too, dont worry bout it buddy!

I also wanted to recommend you a incredibly interesting movie about this topic, that came out in 2014. They've started the movie back when they were freeing the inmates in the concentration camps so theres recordings of when theyve first arrived but then politics involved into all of that and they stopped the production.

I've only found the german dub version on youtube so far but whatever.
The name of the movie is "Night Will Fall" A movie by Hitchcock. Hope that at least some will watch it.

Side-note: Auschwitz is about triple the size of Mauthausen.

5hift 03-08-2016 10:27 PM

Thanks for sharing.

I've been to several Holocaust museums but never been to the actual places.

Neil 03-08-2016 11:05 PM

Ummmmmmmm

Red 03-09-2016 03:34 AM

0/10 didn't see face reveal of my favorite **** poster

Vicipower 03-09-2016 05:54 AM

Quote:

Posted by ReD s. (Post 682722)
0/10 didn't see face reveal of my favorite **** poster

screw u 2, i tried to make a useful thread but ok pal

Bram- 03-09-2016 06:02 AM

Eyy that's pretty good

TeK 03-09-2016 01:26 PM

:'(

Mangsi 03-09-2016 02:30 PM

Very interesting read, ty for posting!!!

Bryan* 03-09-2016 02:42 PM

Thanks for the history lesson, this is quite interesting.

TeK 03-09-2016 03:40 PM

Good timing bc just finished WW2 unit in History last week lmao

Foxmon 03-09-2016 03:41 PM

Interesting post! I went to Auschwitz when I was 15/16 and I can still remember the smell from the gas chambers and the crematoriums...

TWIZ 03-18-2016 10:55 PM

Quote:

Posted by 5hift (Post 682616)
Thanks for sharing.

I've been to several Holocaust museums but never been to the actual places.

I'm not sure where you live, but if you ever happen to make it to Louisiana in your life, there is an amazing WWII museum in New Orleans, called the National World War II Museum. It's freaking awesome, I tell ya'.

"While this museum has no direct military affiliation, it does a masterful job interpreting the magnitude of World War II. Visitors line up for films narrated by Tom Hanks and produced by Steven Spielberg, while elsewhere exhibits interpret the conflict through the eyes of the participants. 'It reaches you emotionally. You kind of lose track of where you are,' Cureton says. "

-usatoday.com

5hift 03-18-2016 11:01 PM

Quote:

Posted by TWIZ (Post 685874)
I'm not sure where you live, but if you ever happen to make it to Louisiana in your life, there is an amazing WWII museum in New Orleans. It's freaking awesome, I tell ya'.

"While this museum has no direct military affiliation, it does a masterful job interpreting the magnitude of World War II. Visitors line up for films narrated by Tom Hanks and produced by Steven Spielberg, while elsewhere exhibits interpret the conflict through the eyes of the participants. 'It reaches you emotionally. You kind of lose track of where you are,' Cureton says. "

-usatoday.com

I've been to the ones in Chicago and DC, both are great museums.

At the one in Chicago there was actually a guest speaker who wasn't in a concentration camp but had both her parents put in one.

Her story was actually pretty sad considering she and her sisters were raised apart from their parents in the middle of the war. When the war finally ended, they hardly recognized their mother who was devastated after she lost her husband in one of the other concentration camps.

Liz 03-18-2016 11:24 PM

Thanks for posting these vici, really eye-opening!

I saw a guest speaker who survived last semester when I learned about the concentration camps, it was devastating.


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