Terezin (Theresienstadt) Concentration Camp, Czech Republic
(all photographs by J. Gerencher)

Terezin was built as a fortress and garrison town in 1780 by Emperor Joseph II.  Located about 40 miles north of Prague, near the confluence of the rivers Elbe and Eger, it consists of a larger fortress and enclosed town which was designed to house about 7000 soldiers and their families, and a smaller fortress on the opposite bank of the Eger River.  Both fortresses have thick earthen walls, which are faced with brick and are surrounded by moats.
   
The Nazis occupied Czechoslovakia in 1939 and used Theresienstadt, the name they give to it, as a Jewish ghetto from 1941 to 1945.  During this time, it housed over 141,000 inmates, of whom 33,500 died in the camp, and 88,000 were transported to extermination centers in the East.  Of those transported, only 3500 survived to the end of WW II.    
   
The Little Fortress was converted to a prison for use during WW I, but was reopened as a prison by the Nazis in 1940 and was subsequently used as a punishment block for the inmates from Theresienstadt.  Approximately 30,000 prisoners passed through the Little Fortress, many to the extermination camps in the East.  About 2000 inmates were executed in the Little Fortress by the Nazis.

Map of Terezin (Theresienstadt)
Fortress and enclosed city, Terezin, to left of Eger River 
and Little Fortress to right of river.


The streets within the main fortress of Terezin
were narrow and the housing was closely spaced.

Teresin Garrison Housing Units
Housing for the soldier families within Terezin was plain.
These housing structures in the main garrison were used for
ghetto housing during the interval 1941 to 1945.

Entrance to Little Fortress
Entrance to Little Fortress with bridge that crosses moat,
 which is now dry and contains grass.

Sign over prison yard entrance.
"Arbeit Macht Frei" means "Work Sets You Free,"
over the entrance to a prison yard in the Little Fortress.

Entrance to cell block.
A cell block for holding a group of prisoners,
Little Fortress.

View from cell window.
The view from a cell interior,  Little Fortress.

After the defeat of the German army, the Germans were expelled from Czechoslovakia and the town was again named Terezin.  Today Terezin is a part of the Czech Republic and is a functioning city within the former fortress walls.  Within Terezin there is a museum which gives an account of the history of the fortress and the events that took place here during the period 1941 to 1945.  Little Fortress is currently operated as a memorial and park.  A small admission is charged for entrance to the museum and to Little Fortress.