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how did the germans get rid of the ouderous smell from the dead bodies from the Auschwitz concentration camp

2007-03-27 13:36:13 · 8 answers · asked by Riccardo 2 in Arts & Humanities History

8 answers

sight of touch

2007-03-27 13:39:39 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

i'm no longer efficient if scary may be the right be conscious. that is not ordinary to discover the right be conscious for it because the feeling you get at the same time as vacationing Auschwitz or yet another position with the same heritage will be compared to any feeling you have ever experienced everywhere else, that's thoroughly unique. i'm no longer in any respect a superstitious individual, yet you may fairly 'sense' interior the air that some thing undesirable has handed off in this position - per chance it really is only because of your individual expertise of what has handed off there, or maybe that's its bleak visual charm, i'm no longer efficient. quite than scary i could describe it as haunting, nerve-racking and extremely frightening. I went there with a large crew of babies, some human beings reacted to the adventure by technique of crying, yet maximum were only silent for a lengthy time period on the acceptable of the visit because it gave you a lot to duplicate on and no individual had the words to precise the sentiments it extra up. once you've the prospect to go there, take it - that's a tricky position to visit, besides the indisputable fact that that's unforgettable in a fashion that is regrettably not ordinary for me positioned for the length of to someone who hasn't experienced it.

2016-12-02 22:18:30 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Why would they really bother to try too hard?
No one would complain about it, otherwise they'd end up the in a camp themselves.

Auschwitz-Birkenau.
Bodies would be taken to the crematorium . Very efficient, but the numbers of bodies which required disposal outstripped the capacity of the operation. Soon bodies had to be dumped into mass graves on the periphery of the camp.
Buchenwald was liberated by the Third U.S. Army on April 11, 1945. In the aftermath, General Patton "invited" 1000 citizens of Weimar, the seat of German High Culture, to visit the camp, to help in burying the bodies of the victims, and to see just what their complicity in the crimes of Germany, their acquiescence in the demise of civilization, had wrought.

2007-03-27 14:13:54 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Elizbet has given a good answer,but omitted the Typhoid and Cholera.Also Dysentery,bad Sanitation,the smell of Zyclon B and the smell of the ovens.Sorry i`ve been so graphic,but its the only way to attempt to explain the subject.

2007-03-27 16:39:21 · answer #4 · answered by shane c 5 · 2 0

They didn't, or rather, couldn't.
Here are some memories of Holocaust survivors that mention the smell at Auschwitz:
http://www.ushmm.org/newsfeed/Auschwitz/viewstory.php?storyid=2337
http://library.thinkquest.org/12663/survivors/witness.html

2007-03-27 13:42:10 · answer #5 · answered by parrotjohn2001 7 · 4 0

It was impossible to get rid of. Those who liberated the camps found piles of bodies, burned flesh has astrong oder.

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2007-03-27 13:41:50 · answer #6 · answered by ? 5 · 1 0

ovens to burn the corpses

2007-03-27 13:58:06 · answer #7 · answered by BANANA 6 · 0 0

I am not sure how they did it exactly, but however they did it, I am sure they did it very efficiently............

2007-03-27 13:44:25 · answer #8 · answered by Mister Fizzy 2 · 0 0

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