At this time, everyone was frightened and rushed to a place far away from the pipe, and finally rushed to the huge iron gate. Near the gate, they piled up into a pyramid. Everyone was blue, stained wi

At this time, everyone was frightened and rushed to a place far away from the pipe, and finally rushed to the huge iron gate. Near the gate, they piled up into a pyramid. Everyone was blue, stained with blood, and wet everywhere. They grabbed each other and pinched each other to crawl over, and they refused to let go until they died. After about 20 to 30 minutes, the pile of exposed flesh became motionless. The air extractor removed the poisonous gas, and the door opened, and the "special team" personnel came in to take over the work. These "special team" members were all imprisoned Jewish men. The battalion promised to spare them from death and give them enough food as a reward for doing the most horrific work in the world. They all wear gas masks and rubber boots when working, and hold faucets in their hands.

At that time, German businessmen had launched a fierce competition to build this new equipment for killing and disposing of corpses and to supply this lethal blue crystal drug. The Erfurt company Tof & Sons, which manufactured heating equipment, was successful in its bid to build the crematorium at Auschwitz.

Toff & Sons is not the only company in Germany that engages in such appalling business. The disposal of dead bodies in many other concentration camps also gave rise to commercial competition. For example, the Didier factory in Berlin once bid to install a crematorium in a Nazi concentration camp in Belgrade, claiming that the furnace could produce very high-quality products.

Another company doing business like Belgrade is Corey. It emphasizes its vast experience in this field, for it has built four crematoriums for Dachau and five for Lublin, all of which have been used with great satisfaction in practice.

Germany’s free enterprises have tried their best to use high-quality materials and provide exquisite technology, but they still cannot meet the needs of burning corpses. In many concentration camps, the well-structured crematoriums were far from meeting the needs, especially in the Auschwitz concentration camp in 1944, which burned 6,000 corpses every day. In just 46 days in the summer of 1944, between 250,000 and 300,000 Hungarian Jews were killed in this concentration camp. Even the gas killing chambers could not keep up with the demand, and special operations teams had to be used to carry out mass shootings. The bodies were simply thrown into trenches and burned, many of which were only partially burned, and then bulldozed and buried. In the end, the concentration camp leaders complained that the crematorium was not only insufficient for use, but also "uneconomical."

The crystalline drug "Zyklon B" used to kill the victims was supplied by two German companies, both of which obtained patent rights from I.G. Farben Chemical Company. These two companies are Hamburg's Tetsch Stabenov Company and Dessau's Dagage Company; the former supplies 2 tons of cyanide crystals per month, and the latter supplies 0.75 tons per month.

How many unfortunate and innocent people were massacred in this inhumane death camp? People will never know the exact number. Most of these people were Jews, but there were also many others, especially Soviet prisoners of war.

In Hitler's eyes, Jews and Slavs were inferior peoples who had no right to live in the world and must disappear from the earth forever. Therefore, Hitler used various methods to kill them, the most brutal of which was the concentration camp.

The more than 30 major concentration camps set up by Nazi Germany across various countries were all death camps, where millions of criminals starved and finally died here.