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Museum
The post-camp relics are protected by the Museum created in 1947. The Memorial today is i.a. the Archive and Collections as well as research, conservation and publishing center.
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History
KL Auschwitz was the largest of the German Nazi concentration camps and extermination centers. Over 1.1 million men, women and children lost their lives here.
- Home Page - History
- Before the extermination
- Auschwitz I
- Auschwitz II
- Auschwitz III
- Auschwitz sub-camps
- Auschwitz and Shoah
- Categories of prisoners
- Fate of children
- Prisoner classification
- Life in the camp
- Punishments and executions
- Camp hospitals
- Medical experiments
- Resistance
- Informing the world
- Evacuation
- Liberation
- The number of victims
- The SS garrison
- Holocaust denial
- Auschwitz Calendar
- Photo gallery
- Information on victims
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Visiting
The authentic Memorial consists of two parts of the former camp: Auschwitz and Birkenau. A visit with an educator allows better understanding of this unique place.
- Home Page - Visiting
- Preparation and summary of a visit
- Reservation
- Tours options
- Online guided tours
- Rules for Visiting
- Opening hours
- Temporarily closed for visitors
- Getting to the Museum
- Permanent Exhibition
- National Exhibitions
- On-line Exhibitions
- Virtual tour
- Plan your visit
- Information plaques
- Attendance
- Photo gallery
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Education
There is no way to understand postwar Europe and the world without an in-depth confrontation between our idea of mankind and the remains of Auschwitz.

International Educational Conference on Memory in the 21st Century
Over 150 experts: researchers, museum professionals, teachers, representatives of memorial sites, and various organizations dealing with the history and memory of World War II, Auschwitz, the Holocaust, and other genocides, gathered from June 30 to July 2, 2025, to reflect on the state of memory and its role in the face of the challenges posed by the modern world.

We, Survivors, know that the consequence of being an alien is active persecution. 80th anniversary of liberation of Auschwitz.
On January 27, 56 Auschwitz Survivors met in front of the Death Gate at the former Auschwitz II-Birkenau camp to commemorate the 80th anniversary of the liberation of the German Nazi concentration and extermination camp.
Anniversary website: 80.auschwitz.org

Sinti and Roma Genocide Remembrance Day
80 years ago, some 4,300 children, women, and men - the last Roma prisoners in section BIIe - were murdered in the gas chambers of the German Auschwitz II-Birkenau camp. The so-called Zigeunerfamilienlager ("Gypsy family camp") was liquidated on the night of 2 - 3 August 1944.

"Auschwitz in Front of Your Eyes" is an application through which millions of people from around the world will gain access to education conducted directly from the authentic Memorial Site. It allows an online guided tour of the former German Nazi camp. Reservations: visit.auschwitz.org.

New online bookstore of the Museum
The new online bookstore of the Museum is now available at books.auschwitz.org. In addition to printed publications in many languages, ebooks are also available on the website.

New research laboratory of the Museum conservators
A new research laboratory was opened at the Auschwitz Museum. It will allow specialized research on objects from the German Nazi concentration and extermination camp Auschwitz.
The new laboratory is equipped to carry out physicochemical research and molecular biology analysis, including microbiology and genetics.
International Educational Conference:
"(Re)member. Is Memory Enough in the 21st Century?"
Final panel discussion:
"Global Responsibility: (Re)imagining Memory Communities and Narratives" & summary of the conference