Loading...

Inside the Gas Chambers: Eight Months in the Sonderkommando of Auschwitz

ISBN: 978-0-745-64384-7

January 2011

Polity

232 pages

Digital Evaluation Copy

Request Digital Evaluation Copy
Description
This is a unique, eye-witness account of everyday life right at the heart of the Nazi extermination machine.

Slomo Venezia was born into a poor Jewish-Italian community living in Thessaloniki, Greece. At first, the occupying Italians protected his family; but when the Germans invaded, the Venezias were deported to Auschwitz. His mother and sisters disappeared on arrival, and he learned, at first with disbelief, that they had almost certainly been gassed. Given the chance to earn a little extra bread, he agreed to become a ‘Sonderkommando', without realising what this entailed. He soon found himself a member of the ‘special unit' responsible for removing the corpses from the gas chambers and burning their bodies.

Dispassionately, he details the grim round of daily tasks, evokes the terror inspired by the man in charge of the crematoria, ‘Angel of Death' Otto Moll, and recounts the attempts made by some of the prisoners to escape, including the revolt of October 1944.

It is usual to imagine that none of those who went into the gas chambers at Auschwitz ever emerged to tell their tale - but, as a member of a ‘Sonderkommando', Shlomo Venezia was given this horrific privilege. He knew that, having witnessed the unspeakable, he in turn would probably be eliminated by the SS in case he ever told his tale. He survived: this is his story.


Published in association with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.

Also available as an audiobook.

About the Author
Shlomo Venezia was a Sonderkommando in Auschwitz.
Features
  • This is an astonishing story of Shlomo Venezia, who survived the horror of Auschwitz.
  • By way of his extraordinary account, we learn about his role as a member of a ‘Sonderkommando’ and the appalling daily tasks that this required.
  • Illustrated with private photographs, as well as detailed plans of the site, this reveals a hidden world behind closed doors.
  • This is hugely important as an insight into the gas chambers, and this period of history as a whole.