At the Killing Centers
 After deportation trains arrived at the killing
centers, guards ordered the deportees to get out and form a line.
The victims then went through a selection process. Men were separated
from women and children. A Nazi,
usually an SS physician, looked quickly
at each person to decide if he or she was healthy and strong enough for
forced labor. This SS officer then pointed to the left or the right; victims
did not know that individuals were being selected to live or die. Babies
and young children, pregnant women, the elderly, the handicapped, and
the sick had little chance of surviving this first selection.
Those who had been selected to die
were led to gas chambers. In order to prevent
panic, camp guards told the victims that they were
going to take showers to rid themselves of lice.
The guards instructed them to turn over all their
valuables and to undress. Then they were driven
naked into the "showers." A guard closed and
locked the steel door. In some killing centers,
carbon monoxide was piped into the chamber. In
others, camp guards threw "Zyklon B" pellets down
an air shaft. Zyklon B was a highly poisonous
insecticide also used to kill rats and
insects.
Usually within minutes after entering the gas
chambers, everyone inside was dead from lack of
oxygen. Under guard, prisoners were forced to haul
the corpses to a nearby room, where they removed
hair, gold teeth, and fillings. The bodies were
burned in ovens in the crematoria or buried in
mass graves.
Many people profited from the pillage of
corpses. Camp guards
stole some of the gold. The rest was melted down
and deposited in an SS bank account. Private
business firms bought and used the hair to make
many products, including ship rope and
mattresses.
For more information, see "Extermination Camps" in the Holocaust Encyclopedia.
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