Extermination Camps Survivors
The personalities on stamps are :
Witold Pilecki (1901-1948) - soldier of the Home Army (Armia Krajowa), cavalry platoon commander, took part in the Warsaw Upraising. In September 1941 he became a "voluntary prisoner" of KL ( Konzentrationslager - concentration camp ) Auschwitz (as Tomasz Serafiński). His plan was to learn about the running of the camp; he organized inmate resistance. In April 1943 he escaped from Auschwitz together with two comrades. He wanted to organize a rescue attempt, which appeared impossible as the camp's "personnel" consisted of more than three thousand Germans. After the war commander Pilecki was imprisoned by the communist government, tortured and found - as many former underground activists - an "enemy of the People's Republic of Poland", and sentenced to death on a show trial.
20th Century Nightmare
The first concentration camp was established in Dachau (Bavaria) already in 1933, i.e. when Hitler took power, to isolate Third Reich opponents and those who were deemed "unusable". After World War II broke out, the camps were established also in the territory of countries in occupation; some of them became death factories where masses of people, mainly Jews, were murdered. The largest such camp with gas chambers and crematories was KL Auschwitz-Birkenau (1940-1945) in Oświęcim and Brzezinka. Around 18 million people were imprisoned in all types of Nazi camps; 11 million of them died. Only around 20% of prisoners survived from among prisoners of concentration camps and extermination camps.
Courtesy- Polish Post