Today in History:

Unlocking the Gates of Auschwitz



Powerful exhibit shares local stories of hope, despair and loss during the Holocaust

Unlocking the Gates of Auschwitz 70 Years Later opens at Freedom Center through May 26

altCINCINNATI –Through artifacts, incredible photographs and powerful personal stories, Unlocking the Gates of Auschwitz 70 Years Later gives voice to the survivors and eyewitnesses of Auschwitz, telling the heartbreaking stories of death and the remarkable stories of life inside a hellish world devoid of humanity and decency. The exhibit was curated by the Center for Holocaust and Humanity Education with the guidance of Holocaust scholar Dr. Michael Berenbaum and features documents and artifacts on loan from the Jacob Rader Marcus Center of the American Jewish Archives, the Klau Library of Hebrew Union College – Jewish Institute of Religion, the Randolph family and the private collection of local collector Steven F. Cassidy. Unlocking the Gates of Auschwitz 70 Years Later uses never before seen artifacts to tell the history of the Holocaust from various perspectives: victim, collaborator, bystander and perpetrator. Auschwitz’s history of systematic and organized genocide provides a stark warning and call to action for those today to stand up against injustice, inhumanity and genocide.

“Auschwitz has become synonymous with the Holocaust and serves as a symbol of man’s inhumanity to their fellow man. As we mark this significant anniversary, we are called to learn about it anew,” says Sarah L. Weiss, executive director of the Center for Holocaust and Humanity Education. “This exhibit will shed new light on this important part of our collective history and the Freedom Center serves as a fitting site to learn and reflect on a period in our history when the human spirit was challenged by inhumane cruelty.”

A symbol of oppression, inhumanity and unspeakable atrocities, Auschwitz is the world’s most notorious concentration camp. Between 1940 and 1945, approximately 1.3 million men, women and children, most of whom were Jewish, were deported to Auschwitz. Before the camp was finally liberated by Soviet forces on January 27, 1945, 1.1 million had perished at Auschwitz. Only 7,000 survivors remained when Soviet troops entered the camp.

Auschwitz was originally constructed in 1940 and grew as subcamps were added, eventually covering a total area of 15 square miles. Included in the exhibition are train tickets to Auschwitz, visual reminders of how Jews across Europe were rounded up and deported by the Nazis, packed onto rail cars and forced to stand for days on end without sufficient food, water or facilities before arriving at concentration camps in the thousands. After arriving at Auschwitz the prisoners went through a selection process, the result of which was either forced labor or death on an industrial scale inside gas chambers where the life was choked out of them by Zyclon B, a pesticide used as a tool against what the Nazis viewed as a plague on Europe.

The physical toll on the prisoners at Auschwitz was unimaginable in a civilized world. The mental and emotional toll was even worse. Jews were stripped of their identity, their name replaced by a number tattooed on their left forearm. Local survivors Bella Ouziel and Werner Coppel share the nightmarish experiences they endured, including receiving their tattoos.

Humans ceased being treated as humans. Stock shares from IG Farben, a factory created at Auschwitz to serve the German war effort, show the profits gained on the backs of human beings treated as inanimate pieces of machinery, cogs to be replaced when one wore out and needed to be destroyed.

Families were torn apart. Husbands, fathers and sons watched as their wives, sisters and daughters were pulled aside, never to be seen again. New families formed inside camps with strangers playing the role of brother, sister, mother and father. The support of these camp families allowed people to muster the will to survive through the darkness of their captivity. Many tried to reconnect with loved ones after liberation, returning to find their homes looted, destroyed or occupied by strangers.

altAmongst the horrors of Auschwitz there was also hope. A rabbi inside Auschwitz told Werner of a Haggadah he had buried in a cemetery to prevent it from being destroyed by the Nazis as Jews were rounded up for deportation to concentration camps. Following liberation Werner dug up the Haggadah, using it during the next Passover Seder. Traditionally, reading the Haggadah at the Seder table is a reminder that God liberated the Jews from slavery in Egypt. Though the rabbi did not live to see liberation, his Haggadah and Werner’s promise to retrieve it was a reminder and a confirmation of faith that the Lord would liberate the Jews once again.

In the heart of a civilized world it seemed incomprehensible that humans could be capable of committing such unspeakable atrocities. But the artifacts, photos and stories of the Holocaust awaken one’s conscience to the grim reality that exists in parts of the world where fear, hatred and ignorance reign. Unlocking the Gates of Auschwitz 70 Years Later gives a voice to the survivors and eyewitnesses of Auschwitz altand invites us today to stand up against injustice around the world.

“We must live a life that ensures that the suffering and sacrifice of those during the dark periods in human history are not in vain,” says Clarence G. Newsome, PhD, president of the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center. “Unlocking the Gates of Auschwitz 70 Years Later is a reminder that the unimaginable is possible but that the human spirit can and will prevail. Together, we can secure freedom in all its forms for all people regardless of race, creed or gender and we can defend that freedom against any sinister and evil plot.”

Unlocking the Gates of Auschwitz 70 Years Later is open through May 26 at the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center. Unlocking the Gates of Auschwitz 70 Years Later is presented by the Center for Holocaust and Humanity Education, the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center and Cincinnati Museum Center with the support of the Jewish Foundation of Cincinnati and the Carol Ann and Ralph V. Haile Jr./U.S. Bank Foundation. For more information visit www.freedomcenter.org.

To book a tour of Unlocking the Gates of Auschwitz 70 Years Later, please call the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center at (513) 333-7739 or visit www.freedomcenter.org.

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About the Center for Holocaust and Humanity for Education

The Center for Holocaust and Humanity Education teaches about the Holocaust, remembers its victims and acts on its lessons. Through innovative programs and partnerships, CHHE challenges injustice, inhumanity and prejudice, and fosters understanding, inclusion and engaged citizenship. Please visit www.holocaustandhumanity.org or call 513-487-3055 for more information.

 

About the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center

The National Underground Railroad Freedom Center (NURFC) opened August 2004 on the banks of the Ohio River in downtown Cincinnati, Ohio. Through permanent and changing exhibits, public programs and online resources, we reveal stories about freedom’s heroes, from the era of the Underground Railroad to contemporary times, challenging and inspiring everyone to take courageous steps for freedom today. In 2010, NURFC opened the world’s first permanent, museum-quality exhibition on human trafficking. Since then it has been working to connect the lessons of the Underground Railroad to inform and inspire the fight to end human trafficking. Partnerships include Historians Against Slavery, Polaris Project, Free the Slaves, US Department of State and International Justice Mission. In 2014, NURFC launched a new online resource in the fight against modern slavery, endslaverynow.org. More than 1 million people have visited NURFC’s galleries, with another 2 million experiencing NURFC online at freedomcenter.org.

About Cincinnati Museum Center

Cincinnati Museum Center (CMC) at Union Terminal is a nationally recognized institution and national historic landmark. Dedicated to sparking community dialogue, insight and inspiration, CMC was awarded the 2009 National Medal for Museum and Library Service from the Institute of Museum and Library Services and received accreditation from the American Alliance of Museums in 2012. CMC is one of only 16 museums in the nation with both of these honors, making it a unique asset and a vital community resource. Union Terminal has been voted the nation's 45th most important building by the American Institute of Architects. Organizations within CMC include the Cincinnati History Museum, Duke Energy Children's Museum, Museum of Natural History & Science, Robert D. Lindner Family OMNIMAX® Theater and Cincinnati History Library & Archives. Recognized by Forbes Traveler Magazine as the 17th most visited museum in the country, CMC welcomes more than one million visitors annually. For more information, visit www.cincymuseum.org.