The Buchenwald concentration camp was located less than ten kilometres from the Weimar city centre. Operated by the SS from 1937 to 1945, it was one of the Nazi regime’s most important instruments for the racist reconstruction of Germany and later of Europe. Every day, the inmates had the inscription in the camp gate – »JEDEM DAS SEINE« (»To Each His Own«) – before their eyes. This cynical reinterpretation of the expression’s original meaning legitimized the ostracism and violence to which »strangers to the community« were subjected.
The new permanent exhibition analyses what this meant for the more than 270,000 persons deported to Buchenwald. Drawing on the current state of research based on archival studies carried out worldwide, the accompanying catalogue also presents hitherto unknown historical documents and photos. Fundamental essays by such notable historians as Ulrich Herbert, Frank Bajohr or Johannes Tuchel and a contribution by the writer and former Buchenwald inmate Ivan Ivanji moreover offer concise discussions of the Nazi crimes committed in the concentration camps and place them in context.
Volkhard KniggeVolkhard Knigge, Prof. em., Dr. phil., geb. 1954, Historiker, Geschichtsdidaktiker, Psychoanalytiker. Von 1994 bis April 2020 Direktor der Stiftung Gedenkstätten Buchenwald und Mittelbau-Dora, kuratierte und leitete zahlreiche Ausstellungen, 2002 Ernennung ...
mehrRikola-Gunnar LüttgenauRikola-Gunnar Lüttgenau, geb. 1966, ist Historiker und stellvertretender Direktor der Stiftung Gedenkstätten Buchenwald und Mittelbau-Dora. Er ist Kurator zahlreicher Ausstellungen zur Lagergeschichte im 20. Jahrhundert, darunter: »Schwarz auf Weiß«. ...
mehrHarry SteinHarry Stein, Kustos für die Geschichte des Konzentrationslagers Buchenwald an der Stiftung Gedenkstätten Buchenwald und Mittelbau-Dora.
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