itle of Paper : Auschwitz the Nazi Concentration Camp.
            
            
            
            
Located thirty-seven miles west of Krakow, Auschwitz was the camp where Jewish people were killed and .
            
worked.  This camp , out of all the rest tortured the most people.  At the camp there was a  place called the .
            
"Black Wall," this was where the people were executed .  In March of 1941, there was another camp that .
            
started to be built.  This second camp was called Auschwitz II, or Birkinau.  It was located 1.9 miles away .
            
from Auschwitz I.  People that were chosen to come to these camps were expelled from their homes.  Their .
            
houses were destroyed for the purpose of building Birkinau.  Birkinau had nine sub-units. They were .
            
separated from each other by electrically charged fences that lines their borders. In August 1942, the .
            
womens? section at Auscwitz I was moved to Birkinau.  Nine hundred and ninety-nine women from .
            
Ravensbruck camp and other women from different camps joined them also.  Birkinau now had over 6,000 .
            
women prisoners being held.  In the town Monowitz, another camp w!.
            
as being built. This camp was called Auschwitz III, or Buna-Monowitz.  Other camps that were located .
            
close to Monowitz were moved to Buna-Monowitz.  The population of Birknau was the most densly .
            
populated out of all the camps.  It also had the most cruel and bad conditions of all the camps in the .
            
complex.  The prisoners at Birkinau mostly consisted of Jews, Poles , and Germans.  There were a number .
            
of Gypsy and Czech Jew family camps located at Birkinau for a period of time also.  In Birkinau, the gas .
            
chambers and the oven, where the bodies were burned operated at Auschwitz I.  Birkinau and all the other .
            
sub-camps were mostly forced labor camps.  The most recognized of the labor camps are, Budy, .
            
Czechowitz, Glenwitz, Rajsko, and Furstenarube.  The prisoners here were worked to the point of death.  .
            
Trains transported people to the camps, and violently forced them off the train.