No amount of reading can prepare you for standing inside the very buildings where this history…read moreunfolded. Auschwitz is one of those places every person should experience--not because it's easy, but because it's necessary.
One of the most haunting buildings is Block 10, where medicine was transformed into a weapon. It became the center for medical experiments on prisoners, particularly women, who were selected not because they were ill, but because Nazi doctors viewed them as expendable. Many endured forced sterilization experiments as part of the Nazi obsession with racial purity. Physicians tested methods they believed could sterilize millions of people quickly and cheaply, inflicting unimaginable pain and suffering in the name of pseudoscience.
Just steps away stands Block 11, known throughout the camp as the "Death Block." This prison within the prison was reserved for those accused of resistance, attempting escape, helping fellow prisoners, or violating camp rules. Beneath the building are the infamous standing cells--tiny chambers, roughly one square meter in size, where four prisoners were forced to stand together through the night with almost no air. Other cells were kept in complete darkness, while the starvation cells slowly claimed lives by denying prisoners food and water.
Between these stands the Black Wall, reconstructed after the original was dismantled by the retreating Germans. This quiet courtyard became one of Auschwitz's primary execution sites. Thousands of prisoners were led here, ordered to face the wall, and executed with a gunshot to the back of the head. The wall itself was covered with black insulating material to absorb bullets and reduce ricochets. Nearby stands the reconstructed gas chamber and crematorium, among the first facilities at Auschwitz used for systematic mass murder.
About the actual tour: stay close to your guide, the headphones don't pick up too well. Drink a LOT of water. The tour felt super rushed so it's hard to be able to stop and read what's going on. And the next tour group will be pushing into your tour group (literally standing on top of you to move). I wish there was a museum that you were able to browse through to absorb everything. And I hate we barely got to talk about the medical aspect and didn't go into the buildings involved in this.