Sites of Confinement, Persecution, and Genocide

Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp

KZ Sachsenhausen was built in 1936 just northwest of Berlin. Due to its location in proximity to the capital of the Reich, the camp had a unique population of prisoners.

Buchenwald

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This exhibit explores Buchenwald's general history, with a dive into the differences between men and women in its subcamps as well as its post-holocaust history.

Bergen-Belsen Concentration Camp

This exhibit analyzes the formation and evolution of the Bergen-Belsen Concentration Camp, its function and command structure as well as how such factors affected the post-war sentencing of those involved. 

Kovno Ghetto

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This exhibit explores the history of the Kovno Ghetto. Specifically, it analyzes the relationships between Jews and Christians in the Kovno Ghetto in light of broader historical and theological trends. 

Hinzert Concentration Camp

This exhibit takes a look into the Hinzert concentration camp and the aspects around what makes it such a particular entity, along with a recount of the perils that came with everyday life.

Warsaw Ghetto

This exhibit will attempt to discover the role that the Warsaw Ghetto played in the Nazi control of Poland, and the further extension of Nazi power through Europe in addition to the displacement of Jews to ghettos after 1939.

Lublin/Majdanek Concentration Camp

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An analysis of the varying function of the 'Majdanek' concentration camp within the wider context of the Holocaust, and how this affected the lives of those imprisoned.

Sites of Confinement, Persecution, and Genocide