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• Above all, it is the personal possessions brought by deportees and found at the site after liberation. They make up a unique collection of items connected with the suffering of the people deported to Auschwitz to be killed immediately, and with those forced into slave labor by the Germans. • The Museum collections also contain objects connected with the SS garrison, the perpetrators of the crime. CONTACT The nature of the collectionsThe Museum collections include: • about 110 thousand shoes; Personal Possessions The deepest symbolic meaning resides in the personal effects of the people, mostly Jews, brought to Auschwitz by the Germans from all over occupied Europe for the purpose of being killed. There are thousands of items of everyday life such as kitchen utensils, shoes, eyeglasses, shoe-polish containers, brushes, and combs. They bear witness not only to the scale of the plunder carried out by the Germans, but also to the suffering and death of their owners. Suitcases with names, birth dates, transport numbers, and addresses have important documentary value and are often the only proof that a given person was deported to Auschwitz. Camp and Prisoner Items Another group of original items from the camp consists of striped prisoner garments, wooden clogs and bowls, and furnishings and other items from the blocks and barracks that housed the prisoners. They document the everyday existence of the prisoners, illustrate the phenomena of resistance and mutual aid, and show how prisoners tried to inform the outside world about the crimes being committed in the camp. SS Items |