The Black Wall at Auschwitz
I

The Black Wall at Auschwitz
I, used for executions
At the far end of a long, narrow courtyard
between Block 10 and Block 11 at the Auschwitz I camp is a brick
wall which connects the two buildings. In front of this brick
wall, the Nazis placed another removable wall, constructed out
of logs and covered with cork painted black; the ends of the
wall were angled slightly toward the center. The purpose of the
black wall was to protect the beautiful brick wall behind it
from bullet holes.
The picture above shows some artwork
done by a survivor of the camp, after he was liberated. He has
depicted an execution scene at the black wall with a uniformed
SS man shooting three prisoners while other SS officers look
on. Two camp inmates carry the bodies from the wall and add them
to the pile in the foreground; it was the Jews who were assigned
to do this work. To the left in the picture is an object made
out of logs which was not at the wall when I was there. This
is the portable gallows which was used to hang political prisoners
in the camp.

The Black Wall at Auschwitz
is a reconstruction
Detail of Black Wall
Shown in the two photographs above is
the Black Wall with dozens of bouquets of flowers and candles
left by visitors. The photo directly above shows a close-up of
the end of the wall. Notice the small rocks left by visitors.
Many people have noticed that there are
no bullet holes in the wall. That's because this is not the original
black wall; according to my guide, this is a reconstruction which
looks like the original. The original wall was removed after
Arthur Liebehenschel replaced Rudolf Hoess as the camp commander
in November, 1943, and ordered the executions at the wall to
stop.
If you want to walk where millions of
people have trod, including the famous and the infamous, this
is the place. Into this courtyard have walked most of the world
leaders of the Twentieth Century, carrying a wreath of flowers
to place in front of the black wall where the victims of the
ruthless Nazis were shot over half a century ago.
It was in front of this black wall that
political prisoners, mostly Poles, who had been convicted by
the Gestapo Summary Court, were executed. These prisoners were
brought to the Auschwitz I camp, but were not registered as inmates;
they were housed in dormitory rooms on the first and second floors
of Block 11 while they awaited trial in a courtroom set up in
the building. After they were convicted, the prisoners were taken
to a small washroom in the building where they were ordered to
strip naked, after which they were marched to the wall in groups
of three and executed with one shot to the neck at close range.
Some of the prisoners, who were sent here, were Czech resistance
fighters from the Gestapo prison at the Small Fortress in Theresienstadt.

The black wall with
Block 11 on the right, Block 10 on the left
According to the Auschwitz Museum, 20,000
people were murdered at the Black Wall, shown in the photo above.
This view of the courtyard was taken through the open iron gate
at the entrance; it shows a tour group standing in front of the
black wall at the end. Over the top of the wall, you can see
a banner or flag flying. This flag is made out of blue and white
striped cotton material similar to the cloth of the uniforms
that the regular camp prisoners wore, and has a red triangle
on it, the badge of the political prisoners. Camp inmates were
also executed at this wall for resistance activity inside the
camp.
To the right is Block 11; notice that
it has a basement with windows down in concrete wells. To the
left is Block 10 where medical experiments were done on sterilization
of Jewish women, according to the tour guide. The windows of
Block 10 were covered with black-painted wooden boards so that
no one could see what was going on inside, and the women could
not see the activity at the wall. The boards are angled out a
few inches to let in a little light through the crack at the
top.
The photograph below shows the view from
the wall, looking toward the entrance into the courtyard. Block
11 is now on the left and Block 10 is on the right. There is
an iron gate across the entrance which is open in this picture.

View from the wall,
looking toward entrance to the courtyard
Windows in Block 10
were boarded up
Front entrance to Block
10, the medical building
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