Difference between revisions of "Inmates' canteen"

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;'''[[Buchenwald concentration camp]]'''
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[[File:Buchenwald Inmates Canteen.jpg]]
 
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'''Description:''' The area where the Canteen now stands was the site of the temporary camp for 9,845 Jewish men who were brought to Buchenwald in November 1938, following the pogrom called Kristallnacht. By the spring of 1939, most of them had been released after they promised to leave Germany.
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<span style="color:#696969;"> '''Description:''' The area where the Canteen now stands was the site of the temporary camp for 9,845 Jewish men who were brought to Buchenwald in November 1938, following the pogrom called Kristallnacht. By the spring of 1939, most of them had been released after they promised to leave Germany.
  
Beginning in 1942, the SS operated a sales establishment in the camp: the inmates' canteen. Inmates who were permitted to have their families send money to the camp administration for their use received camp currency to purchase goods which had been acquired cheaply or produced in the camp.  
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<span style="color:#696969;"> Beginning in 1942, the SS operated a sales establishment in the camp: the inmates' canteen. Inmates who were permitted to have their families send money to the camp administration for their use received camp currency to purchase goods which had been acquired cheaply or produced in the camp.  
  
Today the rooms of the canteen are used for special exhibitions and events.
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<span style="color:#696969;"> Today the rooms of the canteen are used for special exhibitions and events.

Latest revision as of 12:57, 23 June 2014

Buchenwald concentration camp

Buchenwald Inmates Canteen.jpg

Description: The area where the Canteen now stands was the site of the temporary camp for 9,845 Jewish men who were brought to Buchenwald in November 1938, following the pogrom called Kristallnacht. By the spring of 1939, most of them had been released after they promised to leave Germany.

Beginning in 1942, the SS operated a sales establishment in the camp: the inmates' canteen. Inmates who were permitted to have their families send money to the camp administration for their use received camp currency to purchase goods which had been acquired cheaply or produced in the camp.

Today the rooms of the canteen are used for special exhibitions and events.