Man’s Inhumanity to Man, Dachau July 19 2017

I feel that a little backstory is necessary. Sometime between 1974 and 1976, The World at War first aired on American television (PBS I think). Remember, at this time, most households had one TV, so you watched what was on. Well, Dad wanted to watch The World at War, so we all watched. Dad also bought the Encyclopedia of World War Two, and a series of WW2 cards that explained every weapon, battle, vehicle, and personality. I read all of it, more than once. Dad seemed obsessed with WW2, none of the other wars, just WW2. Was it due to that fact that he was a Marine, or the solid German ancestry? I’m not sure, never asked, and he never told.

Fast forward to 2017, while I’m planning a vacation to Germany. A trip to Dachau was one of the first stops on the list. I’ve seen the pictures, and read the stories since I’ve been 11 years old. I still watch The World at War. No problem seeing some history….. Wrong! While the pictures were not new, the camp not complete, the story unfolds in the museum, and the visitors cry. It’s an unbelievable feeling walking through a place of such horror.
Here are the pictures.
Entrance

Work sets you free.
gate

Building

Main building

The map of the camp system, with all of the sub camps.
camps

poster

wall

poster

sculpture

never again

Guard tower

Entering this grass lead to being shot.
kill zone

barrack floors

There are now a Jewish Memorial, Catholic Chapel and Protestant Church
synagogue1

synagogue2

synagogue3

Catholic1

Catholic2

The Crematorium Area
crematorium area

Decontamination Chamber
crematorium area2

There was a “shower” that was never used.

When the old oven could not keep up demand,
crematorium area3

Four new ovens were constructed.
crematorium area4

crematorium area5