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  1. A vast array of captives—prisoners of war, political and religious opponents, forced laborers, Jews and Roma targeted for extermination as racial enemies, and gay men incarcerated because of their sexuality—were compelled to march.

  2. May 18, 2021 · Per a statement, the exhibition examines how researchers gathered forensic evidence and otherwise documented the death marches in the aftermath of the Holocaust. Death Marches: Evidence and...

  3. As Allied forces approached Nazi camps, the SS organized “death marches” (forced evacuations) of concentration camp inmates, in part to keep large numbers of concentration camp prisoners from falling into Allied hands.

  4. These forced evacuations come to be called “death marches.” In mid-January 1945, as Soviet forces approached the Auschwitz concentration camp complex, the SS began evacuating Auschwitz and its subcamps. SS units forced nearly 60,000 prisoners to march west from the Auschwitz camp system.

  5. In early May 1945, American troops liberate the surviving prisoners from the death march to Tegernsee. Near the end of WWII, the Germans began marching prisoners out of camps and away from the front. Read more about the brutal conditions of these death marches.

  6. Accounts from the Death Marches are among the most harrowing of the Holocaust. Survivors recall a grueling pace and constant brutality. The route of one of the final death marches from Auschwitz, in January 1945, can be traced by following the mass graves of those found by Polish villagers and townspeople along the route. As the Eastern Front ...

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  8. Prisoners were marched to train stations, often a long way; transported for days at a time without food in freight trains; then forced to march again to a new camp. Those who lagged behind or fell were shot. The largest death march took place in January 1945.

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