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How the world discovered the Nazi death camps

A view of the main entrance and train track at the former Auschwitz-Birkenau site
A view of the main entrance and train track at the former Auschwitz-Birkenau site

Images of what the Allies found when they liberated the Nazi death camps towards the end of World War II brought the horror of the Holocaust to global attention.

Many of the ghastly pictures were at first held back from the broader public, partly out of concern for those with missing relatives.

The concentration and extermination camps were liberated one by one as the Allied armies closed in on Berlin in the final days of the 1939-1945 war.

The first was the Majdanek camp near Lublin in German-occupied eastern Poland, whose surviving prisoners were freed by the Soviet Red Army on 24 July 1944.

The last camps to be liberated were Theresienstadt, near Prague, just after Germany surrendered on 8 May 1945, and Stutthof near Gdansk in northern Poland.

'Death marches'

In June 1944, SS leader Heinrich Himmler ordered some camps to be evacuated before they were reached by Allied troops, with prisoners to be transferred to other camps.

SS officers were ordered to cover up all traces of crimes before fleeing.

The sprawling Auschwitz-Birkenau complex in southern Poland, the largest concentration camp, was gradually dismantled from mid-1944 and 60,000 emaciated prisoners forced onto "death marches" to other camps.

A group of child survivors behind a barbed wire fence at the Nazi concentration camp at Auschwitz-Birkenau in southern Poland, on the day of the camp's liberation

When the Soviets arrived on 27 January 1945, only 7,000 prisoners remained, mostly those who had been unable to walk with the others.

Images not widely shared

The discovery of the first camps had little impact on the public at large because the images were not widely shared.

Russian and Polish investigators photographed the camps at Majdanek and Auschwitz-Birkenau, and US army photographers made a documentary on Struthof, the only Nazi concentration camp in what is now France.

French authorities in particular did not want the images broadcast to avoid alarming people with relatives missing after being deported, captured or conscripted.

Concentration camp victims are led through the Auschwitz-Birkenau camp gate in 1945

A turning point came on 6 April 1945, with the discovery of the Ohrdruf concentration camp, an annex of the Buchenwald camp in Germany.

'Indescribable horror'

When American forces - accompanied by US war correspondent Meyer Levin and AFP photographer Eric Schwab - entered Ohrdruf, they came across a still-blazing inferno and skeletal prisoners being executed.

Shoes removed from men, women and children at Auschwitz-Birkenau

The Supreme Commander of Allied Forces in Europe, Dwight Eisenhower, visited the camp on 12 April, describing afterwards "conditions of indescribable horror".


Read more: Auschwitz: Where the Nazis created hell on earth


The Allied leadership decided immediately that all censorship should be lifted so the world could see evidence of the Nazi atrocities.

That evening, France's communist daily Ce Soir published on its front page a picture of a mass grave.

Days later Eisenhower said journalists should visit camps "where the evidence of bestiality and cruelty is so overpowering as to leave no doubt in their minds about the normal practices of the Germans".