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    ‘The contention that no-one knew anything about the concentration camps or that they could not have known about them is one of the great myths and legends; indeed, it is one that more or less defined the Federal Republic of Germany in the decades after the war.’ 2/2

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  2. "Along the way my mother and I used the opportunity (...) to slip sandwiches to the women." Gerda Kaltenhäuser, resident, 1994

  3. Not without reason the TAZ 1994 titled "NS camps discovered". The history of the GBI camp 75/76 was also forgotten - or suppressed in the .

  4. A micro-study on the of the GBI camp 75/76 sheds light on the entire spectrum of German behaviour towards forced labourers: from assistance despite the threat of punishment to trivialisation, "no contact" and criminalisation.

  5. "The female workers had to march in groups from the camp to the factories." Gerda Kaltenhäuser, former resident, 1994

  6. It was to the that we owe 70 years later, the only pictures of the camp where our documentation centre is now located. They were secretly taken from a balcony in the Kölnische Straße. Fortunately, the heirs thought we were interested.

  7. In our exhibition we recorded a few voices from the of the former GBI camp 75/76: "I hardly ever went past there." Elli Kühn, Berlin resident, 2005

  8. Guests visiting us for the first time are often astonished that the former forced labour camp is located in the middle of a residential area. Yes, the houses were already standing before the camp was built.

  9. Group photo of nine Czech forced labourers around the table in the Johannisthal camp of the Ambi Budd company. On the table there is a bag whose back is labeled "Slaves of the XXth century Berlin 43".

  10. Group photo of 12 Czech forced labourers of the AEG in Schöneweide in front of a wooden barrack in a Berlin camp. Men in the front row are holding a suitcase with the inscription: "A greeting ! Your sons".

  11. Maria Kawecka (centre) with two comrades in Schillerpark in Berlin-Wedding. On the edge of the picture is written in Polish: "We are longing for our homeland, for , for freedom."

  12. The fact that nothing was reported about the true circumstances had not only to do with censorship. The families at should not worry. So many photos of the forced laborers are nice to look at. The appearance can be deceptive.

  13. In our collection there are some postcards, as they would be sent from vacation, written by forced laborers to their loved ones in the . Nothing indicates the real life circumstances.

  14. What was left was the mail . These were also censored like this postcard of Nadja Sitjuk, to which she also attached a photo of herself.

  15. If forced labourers were given leave in the first few years, this was soon banned - too many tried to go underground or reported at home about the real working and living conditions.

  16. 2. velj

    Thank you for following and on the occasion of the 75. anniversary of the liberation of the concentration camps

  17. At the end of the war the forced labourers were free - but they did not receive recognition as Nazi victims.

  18. Forced laborers were initially left to their own; many were hungry for days. With the rapid help of the Allies or on their own, ten million people returned home until October 1945.

  19. BBC News - Photos from families ripped apart by the

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