Dwight D. Eisenhower. As a general of the liberation forces, he made as many pictures as possible because he said, "Sometime in the future there will be some person that will say that this never happened. Now we have the pictures.'
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Eisenhower. Not that it made a difference, they were already taking pictures.
Yes, there are pictures taken by both sides and of course by the Allies after the fact.
The Holocaust was the Nazi regime's shameful 'secret', and photography was forbidden in the camps and ghettos. However, some SS men did take a few photos, and there were a few carefully chosen 'official' photos of what the Nazis called 'Resettlement in Eastern Europe'. In the Lodz Ghetto, the head of the Jewish Council had a kind of photographic record kept, but this was most unusual. Many of the negatives have survived.
oh he just painted pictures of rainbows and unicorns on the walls of the death camps
The Holocaust was so shocking because Hitler and his Nazis shouldn't have done that to Jews. Jew's are the same as other religions and beliefs. It was also so shocking because of how many Jews they killed on a daily basis, it's like they lived for killing them. The final reason it was so shocking is because of how many people now-a-days think that the Holocaust was made up, which brought the topic of it up and it was more and more shocking everytime, there is living, breathing, and historic places to show you that the Holocaust actually happened. That's why the Holocaust was so shocking.