Tattooing
Buszko, writing in the Encyclopedia
of the Holocaust, explains why some
prisoners were tattooed, while others were
not:
Prisoners were registered
and received numbers tattooed on their left
arm upon leaving the quarantine in Birkenau
for forced labor in Auschwitz or in one
of the subcamps. The same procedure applied
to those prisoners who were directed straight
to Auschwitz I: 405,000 prisoners were registered
in this way.
[Ed. Note: Buszko later
notes that only 65,000 of those so registered
and tattooed survived. knm]
Not included in any form
of registration were the vast majority of
the Auschwitz victims, those men and women
who, upon arrival in Auschwitz II, were
led to the gas chambers and killed there
immediately. Also not included in the registration
were those prisoners who were sent to work
in other concentration camps not belonging
to the Auschwitz system. ... Still another
group of unregistered prisoners were those
who were designated for execution after
a short stay in the camp. That group consisted
mainly of hostages, Soviet army officers,
and partisans. (Encyclopedia, Vol.
I, 110-111)
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