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Memorials & Monuments
Germany's eventful history is reflected in Berlin's many memorials, monuments and cemeteries. These places in the capital are dedicated to remembrance and commemoration of past events. more
The Sachsenhausen Memorial provides information about the history of the former concentration camp at the authentic site.
On the site of the Sachsenhausen concentration camp built by the Nazis in 1936, the Sachsenhausen National Memorial was inaugurated on 22 April 1961. In order to symbolise the victory of anti-fascism, it was decided not to preserve the original buildings that still existed; only some structural relics and reconstructions were to be included. Since January 1993, as the Sachsenhausen Memorial and Museum, it has been part of the Brandenburg Memorials Foundation, a foundation under public law jointly financed by the federal government and the state of Brandenburg.
During the National Socialist era, Sachsenhausen occupied a special position as a model and training camp for the SS and, from 1938, as the administrative centre for all concentration camps in the German sphere of power. Here, in the immediate vicinity of the Reich capital, more than 200,000 people were imprisoned until 1945. The prisoners were initially mainly political opponents of the regime, then also members of groups declared racially or biologically inferior by the Nazis and, from 1939, increasingly citizens of the occupied European states.
Tens of thousands of prisoners perished here through hunger, disease, forced labour and abuse or became victims of systematic extermination actions by the SS. Thousands more died on the death marches after the camp was evacuated at the end of April 1945. About 3,000 sick people, doctors and nurses who remained in the camp were liberated by Russian and Polish units of the Red Army on April 22, 1945.
During its use as a Soviet special camp - the largest of three special camps in the Soviet occupation zone - some 60,000 people were imprisoned in Sachsenhausen in 1945-50, including former SS functionaries, political dissidents and those convicted by Soviet military tribunals. More than 12,000 people died of malnutrition and disease.
Today's memorial site includes some original camp buildings and remains of buildings in which permanent exhibitions are shown, as well as the museum "Barrack 38", in which Sinti, Roma and Jews were imprisoned from 1938 onwards and deported to Auschwitz in 1942. The building, reconstructed in 1961 from original parts, was integrated into the National Memorial of the GDR as the "Museum of the Resistance Struggle and the Sufferings of Jewish Citizens". A right-wing extremist arson attack in 1992, shortly after the visit of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzchak Rabin, destroyed the B wing of the barrack; the other wing and the adjacent barrack 39 were badly damaged. Reconstruction according to plans by the Frankfurt architectural firm Braun, Voigt & Partner was completed in 1997.
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Germany's eventful history is reflected in Berlin's many memorials, monuments and cemeteries. These places in the capital are dedicated to remembrance and commemoration of past events. more
© dpa
From Alexanderplatz to Zoo: the most important attractions and sights in Berlin from A to Z. more