Dachu Concentration Camp Walking Tour
So I just walked down the deck air train station. It’s a bus 726 which is this one. So the get off the bus just behind me. This is where we head up to the memorial. Quite a few people here. Looks like a couple tour groups. Very popular, let’s say, this time of the day. So you get off the bus just behind where I was. Um about a 10-minute bus ride from the train station. Then uh just a walk along this path here. So this is a entrance to the camp. Um get a lot of people here. Hell of a lot of people. That’s why I prefer to do things on my own and in a group. But anyway, um we’ll walk through the gate. I think I’ll just head down this way. Stand towards the crerematorium area. Obviously just the foundations left um of a lot of old buildings. One of the guards, the former creator area. All demo mode. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Fumigation cubicles. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Let’s see. old. That’s new. So, what these are, this is where there’s just graves of ashes. Um there’s now memorial put on them. So these are memorials. There’s a few of them along here. It’s where they dug up pits of ashes. Um it’s unknown. It’s graves of thousands. Um people place stones, relatives, friends who may have lost all as a mark of respect for the people that died here. It really is hard to comprehend. Um yeah, you get a very uh unusual feeling here things. Wow. So it’s just uh that’s where they all executed a pistol. Just unbelievable. Some 42 odd thousand people were killed here. It’s probably double that. No one really knows. It’s just an estimate. It’s a place of execution. that underneath there’s a pit and I just stand them on the edge here. Shoot them and that’s where they’d fall. just the ashes of thousands and thousands of people. Uh here it’s uh you can see the concrete outside edge of the pit. Um yeah. This whole area is well. Um yeah. Um I’ve just walked through uh the concentration thing here. This there’s still a bit more to see, but this is the area where uh is most moving. This is just disturbing. Actually, not moving. It’s disturbing. But this could happen. Um yeah, it’s a funny unless you come to one of these places, you you can’t get a feel for what actually happened here. It’s a very solemn place. Um, and I’m just sitting here little bench amongst the trees and yet as I sit here just there thousands of people’s ashes that I dumped or executed shot. How do you how do you even comprehend that? I’ve been to our switch and that’s a little bit it’s it’s because it’s so big. Um it’s a little bit different but this is just as imposing. Just as imposing to think people could actually do that. You don’t even need you can have an audio guide. You don’t need audio. Just walk around read the signs are in English and several languages. That’s all you’ll need to get a feel for how tragic um how people could do this. This is just one of many camps. Um people say, you know, why do you want to go there? It it’s Yeah, it’s to feel how bad to get that feeling of almost gut gut benching feeling. But anyway, yeah, we’ll move on. So this is a pit here. There’s several thousand 10,000 who knows bodies were dumped. Um you can see by it’s clear that that’s what it was here. Heat. Heat. There’s a few little trails just sort of wandering off here. Um, I’m just going to have a look. I think what they are, they’re just places where people go. This the old one of the old walls, I guess. It’s where people go. You can see the wall goes all the way down there. He comes back. This whole area, goodness knows what would be buried under here. are stored here. Wow. Only some of these trees could talk. Squirrel sweet. Well, that was a crerematorium. Um, yeah, very solemn place. Yeah. So, what there is there’s a lot of uh religious or ethnic memorials. There’s one behind me there. There’s another one behind me just there. Um, there’s another You might be able to just see it sticking out of the trees over there. There’s a few of them now. I’m not going to go into them. I think they’re more for the region or the ethnic groups. But um the king almost like a woriing place. Got a boat going off over here. This is one of the uh memorials remembrance um structures here. Um that’s where the crerematorium was come out of there. Um that’s where I walked in right down there on the right. So quite an expensive camp. Um yeah, so these are the barracks. 1965 and therefore these barracks were in such a state and survivors who built this visitor like ourselves. So these aren’t the original barracks. These were rebuilt. Um, those barracks behind me, the internals of them at the bunks and all that that I just showed were were rebuilt because they were so bad. the bunks and what have you with uh rotten flesh, bodies, disease, and whatever you just uh it couldn’t be. They had to pull it apart and destroy it.
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Dachau Concentration Camp was one of the first Nazi concentration camps established in Germany. It was opened in March 1933 near the town of Dachau, close to Munich. Originally intended to hold political opponents of the Nazi regime, it later expanded to include forced labor, imprisonment of Jews, Romani people, homosexuals, and other marginalized groups.