"In July 1942 the Nazis began to deport foreign Jews living in Paris to Auschwitz.
Of the first 1000 shipped to the death camp, only 17 survived the Holocaust. Many died on the journey, which took three days.
One of the survivors recalled that the victims were 'piled up in freight cars, unable to bend or to budge, sticking one to the other, breathless, crushed by one's neighbor's every move.
This was already hell.'
Fourteen-year-old Denise Sternzus, pictured here, was deported from Paris to Auschwitz on September 25, 1942."
"The Drancy internment camp outside of Paris was a halfway point between life and death for Jews arrested in France.
During the July 1942 roundups, 13,000 foreign Jews living in Paris were arrested.
A third of them were children, who were separated from their parents, mistreated, and murdered.
Pictured here is a gendarmerie barracks that served to house Jews at Drancy."
"SS General Oswald Pohl lived for loot and plunder.
He was in charge of the SS Economic and Administrative Main Office.
In that capacity, he controlled all of the slave labor in camps as well as the Third Reich's disposition of the possessions looted from Jewish victims of the "Final Solution," which were crucial to the German war effort.
"Pohl supervised the construction of thousands of German concentration camps and extermination camps, which housed, worked, and worked to death more than 700,000 slave laborers.
He was responsible for the exploitation of hair taken from Jewish victims, which were used for textiles, as well as the gold from Jewish teeth, rings, and eyeglass frames, which was passed on to the State Treasury.
"After the war, Pohl was caught, tried, and convicted as a war criminal.
He was hanged on June 8, 1951."