Sachsenhausen

Sachsenhausen, one of the early concentration camps, was established in the summer of 1936. Located outside of Berlin, the main function of Sachsenhausen was to train officers to be commandants for the other camps.

Early in 1945 the Allies broke through to Berlin and started bombing on a nightly basis, creating large craters in the streets. The Nazis gathered about thousand Jews and transferred them from Auschwitz to Sachsenhausen, where a subcamp named Schwarzweide was established. This subcamp was responsible for filling in the bomb craters left by the Allied air assaults in Berlin. Of those thousand prisoners, less than a dozen survived the war. We can identify mail from the Schwarzheide subcamp by the initials SCHWH in the return address.

In September 1939 some 900 stateless Jews (stateless because their citizenship was revoked by the Nazis) were arrested in Berlin and placed in barracks 37, 38, 39 in Sachsenhausen. Within several months of the prisoners’ arrival at the camp, the barracks windows and doors were sealed up and the inmates were engaged in strenuous physical activity for hours on end. These tortures increased an already-high death rate in the camp.


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