How is Auschwitz now?Published at Green Main Time 06:38.
Amojin James
Live Page Reporter
In the dark, cold December, I traveled to Krako. It seems that you will also face Auschwitz by going there.
After a long drive in a mini -bus, we entered Auschwitz I – something is extremely unrealistic about passing through the notorious black doors that I have seen several times in books, documentary films and movies.
I don’t think I didn’t even say a word in the rest of the day.
The whole site is terrible. It is silent, kept well, and it is a brutal and rigorous reminder that was ever.
In this camp, you can see how the banks were, prisons, uniforms, and where people lived and died.
Some rooms contain piles and piles of personal items, such as utensils and pans, suitcases and even hair.
After that we went to Burkina, which is a short distance – most of the camp is now over, with some standing buildings away from the railway tracks.
This place probably felt heavy. Very brutal to persist, because the Nazis destroyed so much of it so that they could cover their tracks.
You can walk freely around the site, inside a building that was it. Uninhabited.
This is the day I often think about, and can’t imagine how people had the power to survive.