Aufräumungskommando
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The ''Kanada'' warehouses, also known as ''Effektenlager'' or simply ''Kanada'', were storage facilities in the
Auschwitz concentration camp Auschwitz concentration camp ( (); also or ) was a complex of over 40 concentration and extermination camps operated by Nazi Germany in occupied Poland (in a portion annexed into Germany in 1939) during World War II and the Holocaust. It con ...
in German-occupied Poland during the Holocaust. The buildings were used to store the stolen belongings of prisoners, mostly Jews who had been murdered in the gas chambers on arrival. The property of prisoners registered in the camp and used as slave labour was kept on deposit. The warehouses became known as "''Kanada''" (or "Canada") because the prisoners saw them as the land of plenty. Although the name began as prisoner slang, it was apparently adopted by some of the camp administration. Prisoners who worked there were known as the ''Aufräumungskommando'' ("clearing-up commando") or ''Kanada Kommando''. It was viewed as one of the best jobs in Auschwitz, because prisoners could "organize", in camp slang, and procure goods for themselves and other inmates.


Victims' belongings

From early 1942, when the mass gassing of Jews began, prisoners would bring belongings with them in the belief they were being resettled. The Germans allowed them to carry up to . They brought food, alcohol, household items, utensils, clothing, prams, medication, valuables, and professional tools, with their names, addresses and dates of birth on the luggage, all of which ended up in ''Kanada''. When they arrived at the camp, prisoners had to strip naked, either to be shaved and given camp clothes or to be gassed. From around 1942, the belongings of murdered Jews, Poles, French citizens, the Roma and Soviet citizens and POWs were regarded as the property of Germany, which meant the camp made no attempt to pass it to the next of kin. The goods were sorted and packaged by the ''Kanada Kommando'', appointed from among registered prisoners who had been admitted to the camp as workers. The goods were then used in the camp itself or sent elsewhere, including to Germany. The first warehouses, ''Kanada'' I, were originally in block 26 of Auschwitz I, the main camp in the complex, but were expanded in December 1943 to ''Kanada'' II, 30 wooden buildings near the gas chambers in the BIIg section of Auschwitz II-Birkenau, the extermination camp. There were also two barracks for the ''Kanada Kommando'' and one for the ''SS'' who worked there. At the beginning of 1944 two Italian young women also worked in ''Kanada''. They arrived with a transport from north Italy. On 22 July 1944, 210 male prisoners worked in ''Kanada'' I and 590 in ''Kanada'' II; on 2 October that year, 250 female prisoners worked in ''Kanada'' I and 815 in ''Kanada'' II. Later 1,500–2,000 worked in ''Kanada'' II.


Liberation

On 23 January 1945, during the evacuation of the camp as the Red Army approached, the '' SS'' set ''Kanada'' II on fire, along with the crematoria and gas chambers. Apparently, the warehouses burned for five days, destroying everything except for spoons and other utensils, although items belonging to victims were found in other warehouses in Auschwitz I.


See also

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Auschwitz Album The Auschwitz Album is a photographic record of the Holocaust during the Second World War. It and the ''Sonderkommando'' photographs are the only known pictorial evidence of the extermination process inside Auschwitz II-Birkenau, the German ext ...


Citations


Bibliography

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Further reading


"Kanada"
Auschwitz Album The Auschwitz Album is a photographic record of the Holocaust during the Second World War. It and the ''Sonderkommando'' photographs are the only known pictorial evidence of the extermination process inside Auschwitz II-Birkenau, the German ext ...
. Yad Vashem.
"Kanada (Auschwitz)"
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum


External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Kanada barracks, Auschwitz Auschwitz concentration camp The Holocaust Warehouses