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                KL Auschwitz 
				Death Camp in Oswiecim 
                  
                
                Site of the notorious German Nazi Concentration and 
				Extermination Camp of Auschwitz and Birkenau is located 
				seventy kilometers west of 
                
 				Krakow
                
 				which make an hour’s drive. Between June 1941 and January 1945 
				about one million men, women and children perished in the three 
				Auschwitz concentration camps – i.e. Auschwitz proper, Birkenau 
				and Monowitz – and their more than forty sub-camps. At its peak 
				the whole complex of the Auschwitz death camp was a deadly 
				prison to some 150,000 inmates that were being either murdered 
				outright or starved and worked to death.  
                  
					Visiting the Auschwitz and Birkenau 
                  
                	Currently every year some 1,400,000 visitors come to 
					Oswiecim, an industrial town of 45,000, to see the 
					Auschwitz. Half of them are Poles, and the rest mostly from 
					the USA, Germany, the UK, France, Italy, and Israel. Nearly 
					30 million people have already visited the place.  
					
					Please note that exhibitions may prove traumatic 
					and visiting the death camps isn't appropriate for kids 
					under 14.
                	 
                 
				It takes minimum an hour to see the Auschwitz proper, and 
				another to visit the nearby Birkenau site called Auschwitz II. 
				They are open to visitors (except January 1, December 25, and 
				Easter Sunday) from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. June through August, till 6 
				p.m. in September, till 5 p.m. in October, till 4 p.m. in 
				November, till 3 p.m. in December through February, till 4 p.m. 
				in March, till 5 p.m. in April, till 6 p.m. in May. Archives, 
				library, collections, management, etc. work on weekdays from 8 
				a.m. to 2 p.m.   
                
				Independent visitors may and groups should employ an authorized 
				guide. Over 150 of them provide tours in Croatian, Czech, 
				English, French, German, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Polish, 
				Russian, Serbian, and Spanish.   
                
				Admission to the Auschwitz and Birkenau is free. Unfortunately 
				huge numbers of visitors have prompted the management to 
				restrict access to Auschwitz proper to guided tours only between 
				10 a.m. and 3 p.m. from April 1st through October 31st. 
				Individual tourists may join English tours at 9:30 a.m., 10:30 
				a.m., 11:30 a.m., half past noon, 1:30 p.m., and 2:30 p.m., 
				German tours at 10:30 p.m., noon, and 1:30 p.m., French tours at 
				10:30 p.m., noon, and 1:30 p.m., Spanish tours at noon and 2 
				p.m., and Italian tours at 10:30 p.m., noon, and 1:30 p.m. Such 
				a tour lasts about four hours and it costs 38 zloties per 
				person.   
                
				Booking office is open from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. on weekdays. Phone 
				number (+48) 338448100 or 0338448099, fax 
				(+48) 338432227. Web site www.auschwitz.org.pl   
                
				Individual visitors are free to see the Birkenau site (Auschwitz 
				II) anytime during opening hours. Auschwitz proper and Birkenau 
				are situated some three kilometers apart, a forty minutes' walk. 
				A free bus links the two sites from April 15th through October 
				31st departing every 60 minutes: from Birkenau on the hour and 
				from Auschwitz 30 minutes later.   
                  
					
					Note: individual tourists ought to book their 
					visit online in advance via the website of the Auschwitz 
					Museum at http://visit.auschwitz.org   
                
				Travel to Auschwitz and Birkenau  
                
				Oswiecim is easily accessible owing to the region’s extensive 
				railroad and bus networks and the ample road system. When in 
				Krakow, motorists may reach Oswiecim fastest via the paid 
				four-lane expressway to Katowice (exit to Chrzanów after some 20 
				minutes).   
                
				Every day frequent buses and - less frequent - trains leave for Oswiecim from 
				Krakow's centrally situated bus depot at 18 Bosacka street and 
				the main rail station adjoining the Old Town to the northeast. 
				As to public transport, a bus that stops by the Auschwitz site 
				seems more convenient than a train.  
                
				A number of  
				travel agencies in Krakow 
                offer 
				day trips 
				to the Auschwitz.  
                
				History of the Auschwitz-Birkenau Death Camp
                
                In 1939 Hitler annexed the old Polish town of Oswiecim to his 
				Third Reich as Auschwitz, and a year later the Nazis could start 
				the conversion of the town’s abandoned barracks into a 
				concentration camp called 
				Konzentrationslager Auschwitz in German. First inmates, a 
				group of Polish political prisoners, arrived on June 14, 1940. 
				In addition to Poles there were soon imprisoned Soviet POW’s, 
				Gypsies, and other nationals from the rest of German-occupied 
				Europe to suffer and die in hellish conditions. In 1942, notably 
				after the construction of the nearby Birkenau (Auschwitz II) 
				concentration camp, trainloads of European Jews start to come. 
				Most of them were immediately put to death in the Birkenau gas 
				chambers. 
                
                    - 
                      
						October 1939: the Nazis annex the ancient Polish town of 
						Oswiecim to the Third Reich and rename it Auschwitz.  
                    - 
                      
						November 1939: new German administration installs a 
						German mayor.   
                    - 
                      
						1940-1944: Polish peasants are being driven out of the 
						area to make room for German settlers.  
                    - 
                      
						1940: on Himmler’s order Jewish slave workers change 
						emptied army barracks into a concentration camp.   
                    - 
                      
						June 14, 1940: the Nazis bring political prisoners, all 
						of them Poles, to Auschwitz Concentration Camp as its 
						first inmates.   
                    - 
                      
						1941: all Jews are forced out of Oswiecim.   
                    - 
                      
						October 1941: construction of the Birkenau Concentration 
						Camp, i.e. Auschwitz II, starts near Oswiecim.   
                    - 
                      
						1942: setting up of Auschwitz III-Monowitz Concentration 
						Camp.   
                    - 
                      
						January 1945: evacuation of the Auschwitz camps.   
                    - 
                      
						January 27, 1945: the Soviets take over Oswiecim.
                          
                    - 
                      
						1947: new Polish government creates Auschwitz-Birkenau 
						State Museum on the site of the concentration camps.  
                    - 
                      
						1967: erecting of the International Monument to the 
						Victims of Fascism at Birkenau.   
                    - 
                      
						1979: UNESCO enters the Auschwitz concentration camp and 
						the Birkenau death camp in its list of World Heritage 
						sites.   
                    - 
                      
						1986: launching of the Youth Meeting House in Oswiecim.   
                    - 
                      
						1992: opening of the Center Dialogue and Prayer.   
                    - 
                      
						2000: opening of the Auschwitz Jewish Center and Chevra 
						Lomdei Mishnayot Synagogue.   
                 
        
            		 
            
			Other UNESCO World Heritage sites in Krakow and the Malopolska 
			Province
            
			Krakow's Old Town historic district 
            
			Wieliczka salt mine 
            
			The Calvary sanctuary of Kalwaria Zebrzydowska 
            
			Malopolska's wooden churches 
                	
            		 
            		
                  
                  
					Selected 
                  
					Krakow operators providing tours and day trips.
                  
					Any following information has been provided by respective 
					organizations on their sole responsibility.  
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				In the proximity of Krakow 
                Krakow is Poland's tourist mecca, and also a gateway to 
					many other must-see sites in the region.  
                  
					Jewish Ghetto in Krakow 
                  
					KL Plaszow concentration camp in Krakow 
            
                 
        
                  
					See trains 
                  from Krakow to Oswiecim 
                  and from Oswiecim to Krakow. 
            	 
                Malopolska 
				Province 
                Poland map 
                City of Krakow map 
            	 
                Krakow 
                Poland's prime tourist attraction and a must in Central 
				Europe boasts numerous world-class monuments, charming vistas, 
				delightful atmosphere, and the best restaurants. 
                
				Hotels in Krakow 
                
				Hostels in Krakow 
                
				Restaurants in Krakow 
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