Originally posted by MichaeltheGreat
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Also the camp system encompassed categories of slave workers - Russian POWs, political prisoners, intellectuals, clergy, Slavs, anyone the Nazis classified as untermensch or dangerous elements; who died in droves and were essentially worked to death but these people were not designated as marked for extermination as such. The movie Schindler's List brings these contradictions out very well, even amongst Jews, who were all marked to die after the Wannsee conference in early 1942.
Primo Levi, a camp survivor, also wrote extensively about this. He was a Jew but survived because he was a chemist and worked at the Auschwitz-Birkenau complex. This was the largest death camp but also an industrial complex with many satellite camps. There were endless distinctions between prisoners, which could mean life or death. Allied POWs worked there, including some Australians. Many did not know mass killing was going on there, some who did find out were not initially believed because of the widespread impression after the war that everyone who went to Auschwitz was killed - so they could not have been there. One Australian POW saw the gas chambers and ovens and lived to tell about it. I highly recommend Levi's books.
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