Rare glimpse of unprecedented Auschwitz restoration - best toothbrush in the world

by:Yovog     2022-04-30
Rare glimpse of unprecedented Auschwitz restoration  -  best toothbrush in the world
I narrowed my eyes, like a cold wind that was ruthless, beating small and hard snow particles on my face and eyes.
My hair froze-frozen in some places --
The tip of my toes, fingers, ears and nose is-
Conditions of 9 degrees Celsius.
But I dare not complain because it is the most chilling silence I have found here, only on the snow of winter below, my boots squeak softly and carefully
I am going back to the last path that more than a million Jews have traveled, and they have been cruelly, ruthlessly and computational as human rail freight transported to the world's largest extinction camp, who died without dignity.
This is not my first visit to Auschwitz.
Birkenau, but again I was shocked by the terrible maze of collapsed gas chambers, incinerators and guard towers that were surrounded by barbed wire over 13 kilometres.
The sites of Auschwitz I and Auschwitz II cover a total area of 1,170,000 square meters: equivalent to 240 football fields.
The scale of the scene and the killing were overwhelming.
As I walked through the infamous snow-covered tracks, I trembled, right outside the entrance door of the majestic red brick, the doctors of the German SS made a "choice"-of those who decided to unload from the crowded compartment, which would live as prisoners, and their names would be replaced by a number,
A terrible mass murder engineering system where men, women and children were lured to underground rooms and poisoned by deadly gas, their bodies were later deliberately burnedbuilt furnaces.
For many, including myself, the journey through Auschwitz II was a disgusting pilgrimage, but for the 12 people I came here to meet, it was their morning
Their "office" is not hard to find: two white aluminum tents, extending side by side to 13 metres in the sky, towering above the unforgettable ruins surrounding them.
It reminds me of a crime scene-of course it is-but those who work in it are not just here to investigate the Holocaust, they are here to preserve the evidence left by the perpetrators each year for nearly 2 million visitors and see for themselves what is happening here.
This website has been open for 69 years. air museum.
In the tent, I found two Birkenau barracks, temporarily protected from the harsh winter.
Like many buildings here, both sink and twist in mud and clay, which was hastily built by prisoners in early 1940.
"It's like a race against time," Save staff Kamil B siddkowski told me . ".
"There are so many objects, so many buildings that need our attention.
The scale of the museum is amazing and it is difficult to determine which buildings should be treated first.
"The protection and protection team is responsible for protecting 150 buildings and 300 ruins of the site.
"Water is the primary factor in the destruction and decay of these structures," Mr Bddkowski explained . ".
"The clay ground supports water-it does not penetrate the ground, nor does it drain water-it settles down.
"This is a problem for building bad buildings that are built on soil that is only 30 cm from the water level.
According to an archaeological study, the roads constructed by prisoners sank again and again at the peak of camp operations and had to be built and rebuilt on each other's bases.
In 2013, the Auschwitz Museum began to develop a comprehensive water regulation plan to "limit the destructive effects of rainwater and groundwater.
Two buildings-Camp 7, Camp 8 and Camp 7-
It was soon identified as the most urgent need for intervention, and the protection personnel began to work on site in 2015.
"We started here because they need help the most . "
Every barracks in Birkenau is constructed in a hurry by prisoners with architectural skills who often use materials collected from war
Damaged buildings
"It's a miracle that they're still standing," said Szymon Jancia, head of the construction company.
Each building is designed to accommodate 700 people and each of the 60 three buildings in the building has four prisonerstier bunks.
In fact, six, seven, or even eight people are uncomfortable squeezing in each "bed" and stretching their thin bodies with straw scattered on uncomfortable wooden strips.
They share worn-out blankets and small stoves with little comfort from these elements.
The guards are crossing the buildings block by block, building a modern foundation before recombining the structures, as they have discovered.
While graffiti will be removed, flaws like broken bricks and wood products will not be removed.
The $4 million project will not be completed until at least 2019, and the other 30 brick barracks will need to complete similar repair projects, 10 brick toilets and restrooms in the BI district of the former Birkenau camp and five other brick structures.
"It could take 20, 30 years-maybe more," Ewa Cyrulik said . ".
"But it's important to show and keep reality.
People who come here need to see the authenticity of these artifacts and be able to enter them.
Ruins are nothing.
"Temporary support structures have been added to some of the other structures, and the collapsed gas chamber and crematorium II have added support beams to maintain the layout of the ruins.
The gas room and crematorium III are carrying out heavier construction work.
Szymon's construction partners joked that they could dismantle the failed barracks and build a perfect replica within two weeks: "But that's not the point," he said.
In Auschwitz I, the notorious Block 10 (medical experiments conducted by German doctors on prisoners) and block 2 (prisoner barracks) have been the focus of the restoration work, with the same focus on authenticity, for the first time, original furniture and graffiti were found in untouched toilets and restrooms.
Both blocks are currently not included in public tours, but the museum hopes to promote this in the future after the work is completed.
Nearly 72 years after being liberated by Soviet forces in 1945, the two camps continued to reveal their secrets.
During the repair work, the conservation team found up to 30 artifacts from both barracks, including banknotes, gold coins, watches, buttons, knives and jewelry.
"Instead of being buried, they are hidden," Kamil B . ".
"They were discovered as bricks and wood moved.
"These newly discovered items will be added to the museum's amazing collection, including 110,000 shoes, 40 kilograms of glasses, 12,000 pots of pans, 4,500 pieces of art and nearly two tons of human hair, scraped off the prisoner's head.
The museum's file is more than 250 long, including 39,000 photographic negatives, 70,000 death certificates, 13,000 letters and 16 volumes of prisoner personnel files.
Maybe the best.
The museum's 3,800 suitcases are a famous collection of emotions.
Each has different shapes, sizes, colors and textures like their owners-many of these suitcases are printed with handwritten names of those who bring them to Auschwitz, but they were taken their lives for the first time, and they were taken away.
In a sparse light and ventilation well lab, I watched the staff silently dump six of these boxes, diligently and purposefully cleaning every dirty thing for 70 years-one at a time
In the last 11 months, the protectors have repaired 100 suitcases that will be returned to a new, specially designed state in the best possible condition --of-the-
Art storage facilities.
Kamil B ddkowski said: "These are items brought by prisoners who try to hide valuables inside, which is why they are torn and torn when they arrive at Auschwitz
As an expert in resorting to and preserving paintings, he explains with enthusiasm that no one in the museum can turn to the technique of preserving "objects of the 20 th century.
"These are not works of art," he explained.
"These are daily necessities, but in Auschwitz, there are a lot of daily necessities, such as toothbrushes,
We need special value to recover and preserve for future generations, and it is even difficult to find any suggestions and methods to protect modern plastics.
In this way, our work is unprecedented.
"My visit today is long and surreal.
When I tried to deal with everything I saw, I stumbled across a group of young locals laughing while throwing snowballs.
Looking at the Children's cheeky through the snow, I realized the real meaning of the work that the museum was doing-it was to preserve the story of the Holocaust, let these young boys and girls never forget the personal lives lost and forever changed in their villages, and by making sure that the horrors that happen here will never protect them and all the others to repeat.
It is hard to imagine that a more important or urgent job will happen in a snow-covered village in Poland, brick by brick.
"This is never ending," Mr B. dkowski told me . ". “Auschwitz-
Birkenau is a never-ending project.
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