International Holocaust Remembrance Day was yesterday, but here is another reminder: by Hedwig Brahn (1880-1944), “Tatsachenbericht -Terezín Street,” 1944, included in Philipp Manes' diaries, which document life in the Theresienstadt Ghetto. Of the approximately 140,000 Jews sent to Theresienstadt, only about 19,000 survived the Holocaust. About 90% of the children sent there died. #HolocaustRemembrance #arthistory #Holocaust #drawing #genocide
From “Holocaust History: Concentration Camps,” Chapman University, Orange, California: “Theresienstadt ghetto and concentration camp were located in Terezín, Czech Republic, in a former military fortress. Initially, it was established as a ghetto for Czech Jews. Later, it served as a concentration and transit camp for German and Western European Jews. In 1942, SS authorities deported Jews to concentration camps, forced-labor camps, and killing centers. In the camp itself, thousands of people died from disease or starvation.
In 1944 the Nazis temporarily beautified Theresienstadt to deceive an investigating committee from the International Red Cross to make a film that pictured the ghetto as a 'spa town' where elderly German Jews could retire. The barracks were removed, houses were painted, and gardens planted, however, this was an elaborate hoax. The Nazis staged social and cultural events for the visitors. The facts were very different. Of the approximately 140,000 Jews transferred to Theresienstadt, 33,000 died, and 90,000 were deported; only about 19,000 survived. Children were sent to Theresienstadt. About 15,000 children passed through, and 90 percent of these children perished in the killing center.”

















