Monday marks the 75th anniversary of the liberation of the Nazi concentration camp at Auschwitz. I’m not sure the world has yet learned the lessons of the horrors discovered there.
The Soviet Red Army reached Auschwitz first on its way through Poland. That was on Jan. 27, 1945. U.S. and British forces coming from the west found and liberated similar camps in the weeks to come.
In each place, the story was the same. There was evidence and testimony of an efficient killing machine. Those still alive were used as forced labor. Those who became unable to work were killed. Mass numbers of people were also executed as part of Hitler’s “final solution” for ridding his world of Jews. The survivors were emaciated and dying.
I frequently come across people online who claim that the killing that went on in these camps — of Jews, gypsies, gay people, mentally ill and other “undesirables” — either didn’t happen or else has been exaggerated.
Every time I hear such claims, I want to show these people the photos that I printed from very old negatives when I worked at a University of Alabama photo lab while I was in college.

Doing it for the children? No, they’re doing it for the TV cameras
Authenticity the only path that connects us to people we need
Pretty much everyone shrugs at my most life-changing discovery
Healthy partner will always ask, ‘Who do you really want to be?’
What if we planted for future instead of spending for today?
There are more of us than ever, so why do many of us feel so alone?
If you beg someone to make you his priority, you hurt yourself
Federal checks are destroying incentive to take entry-level jobs
Goodbye, Thomas (1994-2012)