Mauthausen
The LORD said, “What have you done? The voice of your brother’s blood cries to me from the ground. - Genesis 4:10
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Before leaving for Europe, my friends and family asked if I planned on going to any of the concentration camps. Knowing how difficult the experience would be, I was unable to answer with any certainty in either the affirmative or negative. In light of events and comments seen and heard on the trip, I felt a certain sense of obligation to go to Mauthausen; an obligation to bear witness and to say Kaddish for the est. 150,000 lives lost.
We were dropped off at the category 3 camp’s infamous stairs of death- 186 narrow and steep stairs where innocent people fell to their deaths while carrying granite boulders atop their emaciated backs- cut into an otherwise picturesque cliff overlooking a granite quarry. Atop the cliff are numerous memorial sculptures representing the countries of the fallen (Poland, Russia, Hungary, The Netherlands, etc.) and the general Jewish population.
The rest of the camp exists as it was left after being liberated in 1945. A few dilapidated barracks face the gas chambers and crematoria where the original ovens remain. The gravel path between the buildings has not changed since the weak were taken naked into the freezing temperature and covered in water before being left to die from exposure to the bitter Austrian winters.
A museum containing images from Mauthausen and other camps, uniforms, personal belongings, and Shoah inspired drawings elaborates on the atrocities of life in the camps. As it was captioned in German, we relied on the pictures and our greatest fears to fill in the sickening and tear- producing details.
Before leaving I found myself reciting the Kaddish in front of the Jewish children’s memorial and thought that no matter how many times I said the words, I would never be able to pay tribute to all of the souls whose lives were lost at Mauthausen. I will carry my experience with me and share what I learned with those willing to listen. The tragedy of the Shoah must never be forgotten.
~ Lauren ~
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these were memorials built outside the concentration camp after liberation by the countries of those whose nationals perished here
taking pictures inside didn’t quite feel right