The Death March from Mauthausen to Linz
The Death March from Mauthausen to Linz — May 1945 By May 1945, the war was almost over. Everyone knew it. The Allies were closing in. Germany was collapsing. Freedom was only days away. But inside Mauthausen concentration camp, death was still working overtime. Mauthausen was not just another camp. It was one of the harshest in the Nazi system — a place built on stone quarries, where prisoners carried massive blocks up steep stairs until their legs gave out. Many didn’t fall by accident. Guards pushed them. They called it “the stairs of death.” By then, most prisoners were already half-starved skeletons. Skin clung to bone. Eyes sank deep into hollow faces. Disease spread faster than hope. And still, the SS refused to let them live to see liberation. So they forced them to march. Thousands of prisoners — Jews, political dissidents, Soviet POWs, and others — were driven out of the camp and onto the road toward Linz. No food. No water. No rest. Only orders: Walk...