Krakow: Auschwitz-Birkenau Guided Tour with Transportation

(1844)
USD 10

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Popis

Visit the Auschwitz-Birkenau Museum, the largest of the Nazi concentration and extermination camps. Learn more about this horror from World War II with the help of your guide.


Visit the former Nazi concentration camps at Auschwitz I and Auschwitz II-Birkenau on this 7-hour trip from Krakow. By June 1940, Jews and over 700 political criminals had been sent to Auschwitz and the atrocities had begun. Our tour begins in Cracow. You can choose to be picked up from one of the three meeting points or directly from your hotel or apartment. On the way to Auschwitz, which takes around 45 minutes, we show a short documentary about liberation of Auschwitz - Birkenau to give you some insight about the history of the camp. Upon the arrival to Auschwitz our tour leader provides you with all the essentials, rules and procedures which takes place at the Museum. After a short break the group enters to the Musuem by skip the line track and the guided tour begins. The Museum is divided into two parts: Auschwitz I and Auschwitz II - Birkenau. In the Auschwitz I camp, the Nazis established the first camp for men and women, where the first experiments with killing using Zyklon B took place. It was here that they murdered the first mass transports of Jews, conducted the first criminal experiments on prisoners, and carried out most of the executions by shooting. Additionally, the central camp prison was located here in block 11 for prisoners from all parts of the camp complex, along with the main camp commandant's office and most of the SS offices. From here, the camp authorities directed the further expansion of the camp complex. After the first part you will have an opportunity to take a short break and next our driver will take you to the second part of the Musuem In the Birkenau camp, the Nazis built most of the facilities for mass extermination, where approximately one million Jews were murdered. Birkenau was simultaneously the largest concentration camp (with nearly 300 primitive, mostly wooden barracks), housing over 100,000 prisoners in 1944, including Jews, Poles, Roma, and others. Across nearly 200 hectares, ruins of gas chambers and sites filled with human ashes, primitive prisoner barracks, and kilometers of camp fencing and roads have been preserved. When the guided tour is done, after a short break we will take you safely back to Kraków.

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