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  1. Feb 9, 2021 · Chapman had been selected for training by Captain Stephan von Gröning, an aristocratic intelligence officer who saw unmatched potential in the English thief. And to ensure Chapman’s obedience, von Gröning threw Faramus into the Buchenwald concentration camp where he was promptly forgotten for the remainder of the war.

    • Morgan Dunn
  2. Night does not try to answer these questions; perhaps this lack of answers is one of the reasons that the story ends with the liberation of Buchenwald. The moral responsibility for remembering the Holocaust, and for confronting these difficult moral and theological questions, falls directly upon us, the readers.

  3. Buchenwald was a forced labour camp of about 60,000 inmates of mainly Russian POWs, but also common criminals; religious prisoners, including Jews; and various political prisoners from Germany, France, Poland, and Czechoslovakia. [12]

    Name
    Buchenwald Number
    Notes
    Cullen, Malcolm Ford
    78388
    Died 5 September 2002.
    78407
    Senior officer (Squadron leader) at ...
    Fairclough, Mervyn James
    78427
    Died July 1964, Katanning Western ...
    Gwilliam, James (Jim) Percival
    78423
    Died 11 August 2002.
  4. Buchenwald (German pronunciation: [ˈbuːxn̩valt]; literally 'beech forest') was a Nazi concentration camp established on Ettersberg hill near Weimar, Germany, in July 1937. It was one of the first and the largest of the concentration camps within the Altreich .

  5. The journey to Buchenwald thoroughly depletes and eventually kills Eliezers father, relieving an ashamed Eliezer. On April 10th, right before the Nazis can annihilate the remaining Jews, the Americans arrive and free the prisoners at Buchenwald.

  6. After the prisoners’ trek through the snow to Buchenwald, Eleizer’s father feels incredibly weak and yearns to rest in the snow. Eliezer implores him not to but realizes that his father has already chosen death. Shlomo quickly develops dysentery, becoming feverish and struggling to breathe.

  7. These words, spoken during his oral history with The National WWII Museum, express a simple, direct truth. A member of the 45th Evacuation Hospital attached to General George S. Patton’s Third Army, Kiniry was not among the first to go into Buchenwald.

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