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Auschwitz renovation uncovers objects hidden by prisoners

News Desk (Agence France-Presse)
Vienna, Austria
Wed, May 20, 2020

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Auschwitz renovation uncovers objects hidden by prisoners This picture taken in April 2020 and handed out by the National Fund of the Republic of Austria for Victims of National Socialism on May 19, 2020 shows objects that were found in Block 17 of the former Main Camp of the Auschwitz Nazi concentration camp in Oswiecim, Poland. - Numerous objects dating back to the time of the camp were found during the course of renovation and restoration work in preparation for a new Austrian exhibition. As the National Fund says, a chimney flue was uncovered on the ground floor while measures were being undertaken to preserve original masonry. Hidden objects came to light beneath it, including knives, forks, hooks, scissors, pieces of leather, cobbler's tools and parts of shoes. (STR/Nationalfonds/Kaczmarczyk/Marszalek/AFP/-)

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enovation works at Auschwitz have turned up spoons, forks, cobbler's tools and other objects hidden beneath a chimney flue -- some that might have been used to plan escapes, a national fund said Tuesday.  

The objects, which also include knives, hooks, scissors, pieces of leather and parts of shoes, were found last month in block 17 of the main camp, Austria's National Fund for Victims of National Socialism said.

The fund commissioned the renovation and restoration works in the block at the former concentration camp in Poland in preparation for an exhibition.

"These utensils, kept out of sight of the SS guards, were perhaps used by shoemakers, or to prepare an escape or simply to be able to eat," fund secretary general Hannah Lessing told AFP on Tuesday.

The items were likely hidden in the chimney because block 17 was used to house manual workers. 

"It is no coincidence that a chimney was used as a hiding place in the very building where chimney sweeps were accommodated," the fund's structural consultant Johannes Hofmeister said, according to a press release from the fund. 

The objects are not expected to be on display at the exhibition, due to open in 2021, but instead have been handed over to the Auschwitz-Birkenau museum for conservation.

One million European Jews died at Auschwitz-Birkenau, which Nazi Germany set up in occupied Poland in 1940 and which became Europe's biggest death camp.

More than 100,000 others including non-Jewish Poles, Roma, Soviet prisoners of war and anti-Nazi resistance fighters also died there.

Items scattered around the camp and its surroundings continue to turn up periodically during works.

 

 

 

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