The Mauthausen Memorial
Mauthausen Memorial, Austria - 2022 Danube River cruise. The Mauthausen Memorial describes itself as “a former crime scene, a place of memory, a cemetery for the mortal remains of thousands of those murdered here and, increasingly, a site of political and historical education.” Between 1938 and 1945, around 190,000 people from over 40 different nations were imprisoned at the Mauthausen/Gusen concentration camps. At least 90,000 of them died in these camps.
Prisoners sent to Mauthausen included non-Germanic people groups such as Jews, Slavs, Soviet prisoners, Czech and Polish intelligentsia, Roma, and gypsies who didn’t fit the Nazi ideal of racial superiority along with perceived social threats like homosexuals and Jehovah’s Witnesses, and political dissenters including Social Democrats, Communists and anarchists.
As an international place of remembrance, the Memorial preserves the memory of victims by their diverse origins, their nationalities, their ethnic, cultural and political self-conception, and attempts to address the effects of those mass murders upon the victimized nations.