Venezia was subjected to the typical procedure of the deported to Auschwitz: shaving, showering, being tattooed with a number on the left forearm, and wearing the interned uniform. At the end of the procedure, Venezia was locked up in a separate and isolated section of the camp in quarantine, which—according to the German authorities in the camp—would have prevented the spread of epidemics inside the camp. After only 20 days of 'quarantine,' Venezia was assigned to the
Sonderkommando of one of the large crematoria in Birkenau, made mainly of young and strong prisoners in good physical condition, because of the physical effort that the job required. Venezia was part of the Sonderkommando for six months. In Auschwitz-Birkenau, Venezia's mother and his two sisters were killed. After the liberation, Venezia became one of the most important spokesmen for the tragedy of the Holocaust. As a guest on television, in schools, and at memorial events for the Holocaust, he turned his interest to young people as future spokespersons of the immense tragedy that struck Europe between 1940 and 1945. His experiences led
Roberto Benigni to use him as a consultant, together with Marcello Pezzetti, for the film
Life is Beautiful. Shlomo features throughout
Auschwitz - The Final Witness, a 2001 NY Festival winning film made by Sky for Channel 5, which reunited him with his Sonderkommando brother and cousin as they revisited the death camp together for the first time in over 50 years. ==Bibliography==