CHAPTER III
We
arrived at nightfall, after three days without food or drink. We had no strength
left and we were exhausted when we arrived at our final destination -
Auschwitz. The carriages were opened one by one, and strange people appeared in
the openings, dressed in striped clothing like zebras. Only the stripes were
vertical instead of horizontal. We heard sounds like the baying of dogs Get
out at once!! Leave everything behind!! You may only take a knapsack!! We left
everything, because blows were descending on our heads like hail to speed up
our exit from the train. My brother Meir Eliahu would not part with any of his
bundles, he didn't yet believe that he would have no more need of them. To my
grief he wasn't willing to relinquish them until he had received some heavy
blows on his head. No sooner had we left the train than we found ourselves
standing in front of Mengele the butcher, who was holding his club. A gesture
to the left or to the right indicated to each one the direction in which he
must go. If you didn't understand, they made you understand by means of a club
to the head. The butcher was not short of helpers... My brother and I were
directed to the right, where we stood in groups of five. I saw that most of the
crowd were sent directly to be exterminated. Where were we going? What awaited
us? From a distance I spotted my brother's wife being loaded onto a truck with
many other women, crammed together and clinging to one another. The soldiers
were throwing babies on top of them as if they were pieces of wood, or parcels
that one tosses into an empty truck. But these were babies!!! Who can
understand the murderous cruelty? Who can describe it so that people will
understand? So they can feel what we felt when we witnessed these things? The
clock went on ticking, and the German orderliness proceeded with clockwork
precision. Laden trucks departed and empty trucks returned, while the voices of
the victims crying "Shema Yisrael" froze the very blood in our veins...
I stood
with my brother in that group of five. An SS soldier approached us, swinging his
club, and ordered us to straighten up in line with the group in front. My poor
brother was stunned from the blows he had received, and he didn't understand
what the soldier wanted from him. The brute then began to beat him with
frightful cruelty. My brother pleaded for mercy, begging him to stop. At that
moment the club broke on my brother's head. The soldier rammed the broken end
into my brother's eye, and his eye burst out with a terrible gush of blood. I
was made of steel I stood and watched without moving. The soldier then
dragged my brother by the hand to the side of those destined for the gas
chambers. My brother's twelve-year-old son Hank stood there. He was big for his
age. I pressed his hand lovingly, trying to express comfort, and silently promising
him that I would look after him if we remained alive. I would do my best to
ease the suffering of this poor orphan who was bereft of both father and mother
at the age of twelve. His two younger brothers and his baby sister were also
taken, together with his parents.
The
order came to march forward. It was getting dark, so I couldn't gauge
distances. Without noticing we passed through a gate and were shoved into a
wooden shed. There we found more creatures - animals in human form wearing
unfamiliar clothes of good quality, with belts and short, colored coats. They
appeared to be Polish or German officers. What was unusual was that their belts
were strangely colored, not the color of leather. These were prisoners who had
arrived a few months before us, and they had been appointed block leaders and kapos. They also worked as servants to the soldiers, often carrying out their
tasks more faithfully than the soldiers themselves. Killing other prisoners,
especially Jews, cost them no qualms of conscience. They were our reception
committee! From the moment we entered the shed they began beating us with clubs
on our heads and bodies, with the intention of increasing our fear and despair.
Everyone was crowded around a long table and we were ordered to place all our
money and valuables on the table. Open suitcases stood ready to receive the
loot. We were warned that if we swallowed anything it would show up on an X-ray
and our bellies would be cut open to remove it. Naturally 99% of all our
valuables disappeared into the suitcases.
Somebody
had 100 dollars hidden inside his trousers, which he took out to hand over.
Next to him stood one of the workers, hoping to steal the money for himself. At
that moment an SS man entered and asked what's going on? Instead of telling the
truth, the servant accused the man of concealing money. The soldier beat the
Jew over the head to settle accounts...
From
there they took us to the washhouse. To the side was a room where we were all
forced to strip and leave our clothing, keeping only our shoes. There were some
prisoners working there, and they searched the clothes for valuables, which
they wanted to steal for themselves... I was well dressed in my short fur coat,
nice trousers and fine boots, so they assumed I was wealthy, with hidden
valuables. They even took my boots, giving me shoes that had been taken from
someone else. To my despair the shoes were too small. What could I do? Suddenly
I spotted someone else walking out in my boots. I rushed after him to make the
exchange, but before I could utter a word a club came down on my head. I
immediately understood that the rule here was to keep quiet and submit to
everything...
Naked,
holding our shoes in our hands, because we were forbidden to put them on, we
approached the barber in a long line. All we had left was the hair on our
bodies, and now we were required to donate that as well... Several barbers
stood there, with a stool next to each one. The stool had two functions: after
the head and face were shaved, we had to stand on it while they shaved us from
underneath as well. Then, if "my lord" the barber didn't like the way we were
standing, or if the victim couldn't bear the pain of the shaving procedure, he
was "invited" to get down from the stool, and to "be so kind" as to lie on it,
face down, while the gentleman barber administered a few sound blows, to his
heart's content, without differentiating between men and women. Anyone who had
any sort of job was permitted to carry a club and use it according to whim,
using his own judgement and with only his conscience to guide him. From the
barber we passed on to the showers, in an open, bitterly cold building. The
water was icy. It's hard to believe what a human being can suffer and endure...
After the shower we were each given a torn undershirt, a striped pair of
trousers and a number on a six-pointed star, colored red and yellow. I also
received an open-lapel coat, which had once belonged to a suit. Over the left
breast pocket was a two-colored six-pointed star with a number. From there we
were taken to a "hotel" to pass the night...
We
came to a strange wooden shack with double doors and a wide gate. Inside it was
pitch black. Whether by accident or design I don't know, but at the entrance
stood a chest full of clay, with all sorts of tools scattered inside -
apparently they had been building a stove. The block orderlies stood ready with
their clubs, and as soon as we approached the shack they began to beat us
indiscriminately - heads were split open, blows rained down, and people began
running like sheep into the shack. They stumbled over the chest of tools, and
tripped over each other, until there was a pile of bodies lying there.
Gradually we made our way out of this trap as well. A long stove ran along the
entire length of the shack, in the center, and three-tiered bunks were ranged
along both sides, with a 50 centimeter space between each bunk. The bunks were
covered with snow - there were no mattresses or blankets. We crawled in, each
one seeking a familiar face. Each level was intended for 10 people, and we sat
there squashed together, seeking to gain some warmth. This was our third night
without sleep, not to mention food or drink.
The
orderlies began to move among us with flashlights, examining our shoes. They
took every decent pair, because good shoes were a rare find! At the same time
they continued to beat us, without noticing where their clubs landed. Our bunks
were constructed of thin wooden planks, placed lengthwise instead of widthwise.
What difference did that make? The difference was that each person was thus
lying on two planks, and if he wanted to change his position, one of the two
would slip down, forming a crack, which pinched the flesh between the planks.
It was no pleasure, I assure you... As I said, we spent that first night
sitting up, pressed together, more than ten to a tier. The planks were not
strong and they broke, dropping us onto the bunks below. That caused the lower
bunks to break as well, and we all fell onto the bottom bunks. The chaos was
indescribable. The orderlies were most energetic - they appeared at once, and
their clubs went to work...
The
clocks did not stop, and we soon heard the summons to rise. We didn't need to
get dressed, since we had already "dressed" the previous day. We went outside,
where we were required to organize ourselves in straight lines, in groups of
five. Finally we had the opportunity to take a good look around, and see where
we found ourselves. We were surrounded by double barbed-wire fences. Beyond the
fences were watchtowers, with an SS soldier in each, armed with machine guns.
We saw corpses on the fences and alongside them - these were the first suicides
that we encountered. An SS officer came up, received a report, and began
counting the prisoners. Then they brought barrels of some strange liquid, not
tea and not soup either. Later we learned that from time to time they would
boil water with a bit of semolina, which made a sort of "dirty" water. This was
ladled out to us in a strange, reddish bowl, which I assumed to be some kind of
helmet that the Germans had obtained from a country they had conquered. But
that was my mistake - they were actually special bowls for the prisoners' food.
After we drank they finally took us all together to the lavatories, after 72 hours,
to relieve ourselves - it's difficult for me to talk about it. This too was
accompanied by much suffering...
On
the way to the lavatories, alas, what sights we saw. We must have been made of
tempered steel to endure under such conditions. Heaps of corpses lay behind
each shack. They were naked, skeletal, and dried out. You could count their
bones! They lay there until they were collected and burned. We saw a huge
chute, with ten men harnessed to it by ropes. It was piled high with corpses,
some with their heads to the right, others with their heads to the left, laid
out in rows and tied to prevent their scattering. A baton-wielding kapo
accompanied them. It was not clear whether the corpses were thinner than those
dragging the chute. The corpses were unclothed, those dragging the chute were
clothed in rags and all of them were Jewish, may G-d avenge them. In this way
they were brought to the crematoria!
After
visiting the lavatories we were visited by different "gentlemen" with a card
index, accompanied by others with sharpened wooden needles. They asked for our
names, ages and dates of arrest, which were recorded on the cards. Then they
used a wooden needle dipped in blue coloring to puncture each number on the
left hand. One of them asked me when I was arrested and I replied that I have
never been arrested. He gazed at me as if I was an idiot and asked "If you were
never arrested what are you doing here"? That's when I realized I was a
prisoner! Until then I always believed that you were a prisoner if police
placed handcuffs on your wrists and brought you to court for a specific crime.
The judge would then pass sentence. But here innocent people were ordered to
climb on a train.... and after they did so they were brought to a certain place
and called prisoners - without a trial! No trial and no judge! And the crime? A
very serious crime indeed - the crime of being a Jew!
Poor
Hank, my brother's son, was really a baby. He was well grown, but really a
baby, only twelve years old. He had not begun to see the world, and suddenly he
was a prisoner! He stood at my side, trembling with fear, and my soul trembled
with him! My heart was bursting with pain! I forgot my loved ones in the
knowledge that they were already gone, I forgot myself, and my only concern was
to save this young orphan - perhaps a small remnant could be saved?! He wanted
my advice, as if I knew better! He wanted to give his age as eighteen - his
childish instinct was sound. An evil inclination inspired me to suggest that he
give his age as sixteen, and the poor child obeyed my stupid advice...
At
noon they brought barrels full of some kind of food. I am sure that if it was
offered to pigs they would refuse it. Some sort of greens, like boiled bean
husks, hard and dry and totally tasteless. This was our lunch... Hank turned
his face away - he couldn't even look at it. This spoilt child from a rich home
was accustomed to such a good life that even after three and a half days
without food he couldn't look at it. I told him to forget everything if he
wanted to stay alive, to eat what he was given and to do what he was told -
that's the situation and we can't change it. In the evening we received 250
grams of bread with a little tea and a small bit of sausage. That was supper.
3.2 The "Gypsy Camp"
We
were taken to a different hut in a different camp with different bunks. These
bunks were 1.80 meters wide, and the length of a man, ten people on each level.
There were three levels. Once again the width between the bunks was 50-60
centimeters, and 60 men had to manage here... We each received two blankets. We
had no need of pillows - you could always use your fist, and anyway the bunks
were built on a slant, so the head was higher, and in truth you can get used to
anything!
The
new camp didn't even have a fence yet. The huts were the same as those I
described previously - long, with a gate at each end - in fact, they were built
like stables. At one side of the entrance was a little room for the block
leader - he was the "king" and the entire empire was his. On the other side was
a small storeroom with all kinds of things. To keep order there were three "Shtubel dinstis" ("servants of the king"). One was Russian and one was Polish,
and I never learned their names. The third was a Jew named Zolty, a Polish name
that translates as "yellow". All three were sadistic murderers, and to our great shame the Jew was
the worst. He had arrived at Birkenau three months earlier from France.
He was a Polish Jew from Lodz, a baker by trade. For a
time left-wingers and suspected communists fled from Poland to France.
Immediately following the German victory in France the first thing they did was
to arrest foreign Jews and transport them to Auschwitz-Birkenau, and among them
was Zolty. Those who excelled in murder were chosen as block servants and block
leaders. He was coarse and ill mannered, a typical baker. He had authority and
his victims were Jews. They were going to die anyway, and now he had the
opportunity to rob them and steal their meager food rations to fatten himself,
thinking in this way to increase his chances of survival. He attempted to curry
favor with the soldiers and the other "bosses", never taking into account that
the situation might someday be reversed... In the meantime he continued to
beat, to rob and to steal, and people died like flies of starvation, thirst and
sickness.
Our hut held about six hundred people. The day we
arrived in Birkenau a transport came from Czechoslovakia and fifty of them were
put in our hut - all that remained of the entire transport! Another transport
came from Holland, and from them too only fifty remained. They were also added
to our hut. So altogether we were six hundred. One day the three block servants
chose three helpers from the Czechoslovakian Jews. To do them justice I should
mention that they were allied together like one family, in contrast to those
from Holland. The new helpers took their responsibilities very seriously, and
promptly began beating the Polish Jews and stealing their food, which they
divided among themselves. After more than two weeks in this hellhole lice began
to breed. There was a lavatory in the hut, separated from the bunks by wooden
planks and equipped with barrels. You can imagine the smell! People lay close
together without washing or changing underwear or clothes. Illnesses spread
rapidly, people burned with fever but there wasn't even water to drink. When we
went outside we collected snow and swallowed it, but that made us even more
thirsty. Twice a day they distributed tea, but sometimes the servants would
pour it out instead of giving it to us. They kept a bucket of tea for
themselves and poured the rest away, but there was nobody to complain to...
For
the first two weeks I tried to avoid being noticed by the murderers. I kept a
low profile, and the boy remained by my side. We managed to avoid even one
beating. Then it happened that the three helpers were caught stealing food.
They were all beaten and demoted. Zolty needed new helpers so he called for
volunteers - he needed four. Out of all the men one stepped forward, a young
lad from Bialystok. He seemed nice enough, very young and pleasant. Since there
were no more volunteers Zolty began to pick them himself. He chose a Jew from
our ghetto who had been a food merchant, a really fine man, intelligent and
honest. I knew him well, and before the war I had business dealings with him.
Since he had no choice he accepted the task. Another Jew from our ghetto was
chosen, a simple man but good, a shoemaker by trade - I'll tell you more about
him later. In this way Zolty walked all the way along the stove until he caught
sight of me! I was hidden behind the other men, next to the wall by the bunks,
but I'm tall, so he spotted me and chose me for his fourth helper. I was
devastated, but it was forbidden to refuse so I, too, accepted the task.
The
first evening they made us share out the bread ration. The block leader's three
helpers sliced the bread, cutting each loaf into five sections instead of four,
and stealing 20%. They stole more than half of the sausage and the margarine.
While we were handing out the bread they stole my portion so I didn't get any.
The following evening as I climbed into the top bunk all ten men reached out to
me at once, and one of them very nimbly grabbed my bread. Then he put out his
other hand and snatched another piece of bread. I demanded that they all climb
off the bunk and began searching for my portion but all I found were crumbs.
Naturally I took the whole portion still in the thief's possession, but instead
of keeping quiet he began to yell. Zolty heard the noise and arrived with his
club. He didn't ask for explanations but instead he gave me a blow which made
my head bleed!
Two
days later potatoes in their skins and soup were brought for our lunch. The
potatoes were poured out on a blanket but they didn't share them out for a long
time. People lay on the bunks staring hungrily at the food, and it was my job
to make sure that nobody stole any. They lay there and watched. Some braver
characters began to steal forward, snatch up a potato and flee. If I held a
club and brought it down on one or two, the "game" would be over, but how could
I beat a Jew for stealing a potato?
Worse
was to come. A Jew lay behind me, starving to death and pleading for mercy.
"Bring me a potato", he begged. Fool that I was, I didn't take one for myself,
but for this man I bent down and "stole" a potato. As I turned to give it to
him, Zolty the murderer came running towards me carrying a long, thick club and
gave me a two-handed blow on the side of my head above my ear. Although it was
midday everything turned black, I spun around like a spinning top and fell onto
the bunk. To this day I don't know why he didn't kill me. Once again, I must
have been made of steel. for 24 hours I couldn't hear anything but the sound of
bells ringing in my head. I realized that I wouldn't stay alive much longer if
I kept this position.
The
young fellow from Bialystok was outstanding. He looked so young and innocent,
but within a very short time he learned a special technique for beating people
up. He would smash his elbow into his victim's face, and the strongest man
would keel over. Everyone wondered where he learned such tricks and such
agility, and eventually it transpired that he was a criminal who had served time
in a Polish jail before the war. One day when everyone was outside Zolty sent
me into the hut to make sure nobody would steal anything. I came in and looked
around. When I peered under the bunks I saw a crate full of stolen sausages
which had not yet been bartered for vodka and other valuables. The helpers
hadn't put it into their little room, but hidden it instead under the bunks of
starving people, so that, if the SS men found it, they would beat or kill
whoever slept on the bunk. I confess that I immediately made up my mind that if
an SS man would ask what I'm doing here or discover the theft, I would not be Zolty's victim. I would rather bury the three murderers for all the beatings I
had received from them and for the blood of all the others that they had shed.
Fortunately nobody found it, so I had no need to inform on them...
We
stood in the snow all day, barefoot and nearly naked. Our feet sank into the
sticky mud under the snow. They arranged us in lines of five, then they ordered
us to remove our coats and turn them around with the opening at the back, and
march to the other end of the camp. There stood 2 or 3 men holding spades.
Everyone had to hold his coat open at the edges while they placed some muddy
earth in the seam. Then they counted us again and everyone marched in lines
through the mud to the other side of the camp. Some people lost their shoes,
and as they bent to fish them out of the mud they "earned" a clout on the back.
This is how they walked, to and fro...
At
night, when everyone was asleep, two murderers stood guard by the gates to make
sure nobody went out. The camp was not yet fenced in, so an SS soldier with a
machine gun stood at each gate. If anyone stuck his head outside, they shot
him. When the block leader wanted to go outside on duty or to drink with his
mates he would announce it loudly, and the soldier would acknowledge the
message and give him permission to leave. One day I asked Zloty why he stayed
up on watch all night when he could be sleeping, and I offered to stand guard
in his place. He asked whether I could find someone else who would also be
willing to do so, and I said I'd see. I figured that in this way I wouldn't
have to deal with other people, and nobody would beat me for being useless. I
would even get a bit more soup and bread and I could sleep all day... I offered
the position to another Jew, who jumped at the opportunity, and we became night
guards. By nature I don't like to be questioned, nor do I like asking
questions, so I didn't ask what I should do if someone came in for inspection.
We spent a few nights on watch and all went well. I spent each day sleeping on
a heap of blankets, alone on the bunk - truly "paradise". I had a bit more soup
and bread to share with my dear nephew. Things were good, I wasn't beaten and I
didn't have to beat others, G-d forbid.
I was
standing next to the front door one night, while the other man stood at the
back door. Suddenly my door opened and five murderers entered: two SS officers,
two block leaders, including our own, and the camp director who was very
high-ranking, although he was a prisoner - he was an international criminal,
like all the Germans in the camp. I am a great coward by nature, but when I
find myself in a fix my fear leaves me and I become a tiger... Within seconds I
had an idea - I sprang to attention and yelled loudly: "All is well, everyone
is asleep". I shouted for two reasons: a) so the other guy would hear me, and
b) not to show my fear. The chief officer took two strides towards me, looked
at me in astonishment and asked whether I was a Jew. I answered in the
affirmative, and he asked where I'm from. I told him that too. It seems to have
satisfied them, because they left. Some of them were carrying clubs to protect
themselves, so that would have something to "honor" any victim they came
across.
They
went towards the rear door. I don't know what happened there, it seems that the
poor guard was asleep, because I heard the order to bend over, and each of the
five beat him. He was so strong - he didn't make a sound. In Pruzany he had
been renowned for his courage. Apparently he straightened up, because then I
heard a dull thud. There were several mugs on the stove, and one of the
murderers hit him hard on the head with a mug, with such force that the mug
sank into his skull. They called me to bring a bowl of water. There was a water
tank between the beds of the block servants, but we were forbidden to touch it.
Now I had the opportunity to take some water. I brought it over to them. What I
saw there was horrible! The man stood there, a mug embedded in his skull and
blood streaming down - and yet he remained standing! He himself removed the mug
and lowered his head into the bowl of water. The bowl filled with blood as the
murderers stood and watched... A few minutes later they sent him to sleep and
left us. He managed to undress and lay down on the bunk. A short time later our
block leader returned and asked where the poor fellow was sleeping. He
approached him and told him to dress. He put on his trousers, but when he
reached for his coat the block leader told him there was no need right now, as
if he needed him to carry out some minor errand. He took him out of the hut,
and I realized that he wouldn't be coming back and I would never see him again.
For a while I waited hopefully, but no! When we went out in the morning to be
counted I saw him lying by the wall. He had been strangled. They had a system -
they would tell their victim to lie on the ground, then they placed a stick of
wood on his throat and stood on it with both feet. Within seconds he would be
dead. That's what the murderer did to his victim.
The
day after we were counted, a doctor would come by and order us to put out our
hands and stick out our tongues. Just by looking he could tell who suffered
from diarrhea or any other sickness, and he would write down their numbers.
Every day he wrote down a few numbers in each block, and a short while later
those people would be called into the hut, and from there they would be taken
away, never to be seen again...
One
day the block leader came into the hut and ordered all sixteen year olds to
step outside. Two children came forward, one of them my nephew Hank. They were
each given a bread ration and told they were being taken to a trade school to learn
building, and that was the end for him... To this day I cannot forgive myself -
why did I insist that he register his age as 16 instead of 18, as he had
wanted?
There
was a space of about 15 meters or maybe slightly more between the blocks - I
never measured. Next to each block or hut was a ditch to collect standing
water, so the area was always muddy and sticky. This was considered a suitable
place to torture people. As yet there were no paved roads. One day an SS man
came by and chose 20 men, including myself. For his entertainment he instructed
us to lie down in the mud and roll from hut to hut, back and forth. Anyone who
rolled too near a ditch was booted into it. After ten minutes of this sport, we
were all lumps of mud. He then ordered us to run into the hut and get cleaned
up within ten minutes. People rushed to clean off their clothes but I didn't.
Instead I stripped and hung my clothes up to dry. What could I achieve in ten
minutes? The soldier didn't come to check. The next morning my clothes were
dry, and after I rubbed them a bit they were "clean".
One
Sunday we were taken out and told to remove the lice from our clothes and our
bodies. We stripped half naked and got to work. One of the Czechs was wrapped
in a blanket because he was cold. He stood next to me, and the block leader
stood in front of us. We didn't notice him giving Zolty a signal, but Zolty the
butcher understood immediately. He called to the other man - this was a really
brawny fellow, brother to one of the block helpers. They went into an empty
hut, and one minute later Zolty reappeared by himself. Fifteen minutes later a
horse drawn wagon came by, and the poor fellow's corpse was hoisted onto the
wagon and hauled away to the crematoria.
The
next day, after we had been counted, the SS block leader (I should say the SS
man but it's very hard for me to call him a man so I'll just say SS or soldier)
gave the order for us to open our shoes and show him our rags. Some people
wanted their feet to stay warm so they tore pieces off their blankets to pad
their shoes. The murderers had discovered this so they came to check. Whoever
was found "guilty" had his number recorded, which was never a good sign...
I
never did things like that, because I didn't want any trouble, but I had been lucky
enough to receive a pair of rags from a worn old blanket, when they distributed
the clothes. A story is told of a rabbi who went to buy a cow for milk, but
instead he bought a bull. His wife went to milk the beast, but saw that it was
a bull. That night an epidemic broke out, and all the cows died. In the morning
she returned to the cowshed and saw the bull lying dead, so she came home and
said "For milking it's a bull, but for dying it's a cow!" In short, my number
was also noted.
After
roll call we all went into the hut and I climbed up to my bunk to sleep. An
hour later a soldier entered and announced that everyone whose name was written
down must come forward. I lay there unmoving, my eyes wide open, and pretended
to sleep. But I decided to check whether he was holding a list of names - and
he wasn't. The others climbed down and stood in a line. When he had enough men
he approached the first one and hit him so hard that he fell down, and then did
the same with the second and the third, all along the line. Everyone was lying
down, including me, but I was on my bunk... After that the "hero" departed.
I
have not yet explained why they called it the "Gypsy Camp". We were the first
inmates. After we had been there three weeks they brought in a large contingent
of gypsies from Germany, including women and children, together with all their
parcels, placing them in huts opposite ours. The gypsies stretched curtains
between the bunks and organized a sort of family camp. We were ordered to take
them food, but they didn't want it, because they still had food in their
suitcases and trunks, so they gave it back to us, which is what we had hoped
for. In my heart I thought: "You'd better get used to it. Soon you will lick out
your bowls just like the rest of us..."
We
spent six weeks in that camp (Krentin Lager). During that time our number
dropped from six hundred to three hundred. Only one of the Dutchmen survived,
the others died like flies. Approximately one third of the Czechs remained, and
just over half of our number, because we were more accustomed to suffering.
After six weeks they again carried out a large selection, sending the healthier
people to Auschwitz [this is a reference to Auschwitz I], while the weaker ones
went to smaller camps in the area, which also belonged to Auschwitz. In these
camps the conditions were more hellish, starvation was quicker and death was
more frequent, but we only learned this later.
I
forgot to mention another important detail. During our six weeks in Birkenau we
were permitted to wash twice - how? Not far from us stood an empty hut, with a
well nearby. Inside the hut were long troughs. We were sent there naked through
the mud. Each of us received a piece of rock-hard soap, imprinted with the
letters R.I.F., which stood for "rein yiddish fet" (pure Jewish fat). They said
that the Germans made soap from the fat of burnt Jews, in the same way that
they made mattresses and other things from the women's hair... Two men stood
next to the well, drawing up water and pouring it into the troughs. Everyone
who could get near the water cupped his hands and tried to wash like that. You
can imagine what sort of wash it was! And without a towel.
The
soldiers didn't only deceive the Jews. They told the gypsies that their young
men were being conscripted to the army, and then they collected them, took down
their names and started to train them. They gypsies were delighted - after all,
they were German citizens. They knew how to speak the language and they were
also very good at singing German songs. Gradually all the young men were taken
from their families, to the "joy" of their parents. Of course they were really "conscripted" to the gas chambers. Later I will tell you what happened to their
families. Now I'm going back to that last day in Birkenau. We spent all day
standing outside. It wasn't so cold anymore because it was close to Pesach. The
days were longer and the sun was warmer, but there was still some snow and the
winds were still cold. They marched us to Auschwitz before nightfall. To this
day I'm not sure of the distance, but gauging by the time it took us, I'd
estimate four or five kilometers. On the way we met some Jews from Maltz. They
were almost unrecognizable, they were so thin. We looked at each other without
speaking, and that was our final leave taking - I never saw them again.
We
arrived at Auschwitz at night. This was an added torture they thought up. When
people had to be conveyed from place to place, they would first keep them on
their feet from morning to night, under the impression that they would be
setting out shortly. They would finally march them off in the dark and when
they arrived at the new place they were kept standing for the rest of the night
while they made arrangements for the necessary huts or blocks. This would go on
for half the next day as well, so nobody ate or drank for more than 30 hours...
We came to a wide iron gate with the overhead
inscription "Arbeit Macht Frei" (work makes you free!). The gate opened. Once
again they counted us in case a mistake had occurred... and then they took us
to the washroom. We came into a boiler room with a stove for heating the water.
We were ordered to strip, keeping only shoes and belts. Every new place we came
to they took away our clothes. This had two purposes: Firstly, they wanted to
disinfect our clothes, and secondly the kapos and servants went over them
thoroughly in the hope of finding loot. I don't remember how I managed to
smuggle in 15 Russian gold rubles. I found them hidden in the coat they gave me
at Birkenau. Apparently I had hidden them in my shoes, I'm not sure, but in any
event I smuggled them in.
We stood
in that room, squashed together like geese... Just to abuse us, the servants
would occasionally pour a stream of cold water over us from a rubber pipe. When
we screamed he switched to another pipe and we received a jet of scalding hot
water instead. This went on until he tired of his sport, and as the screams
increased they started beating us with clubs. This went on for half the night.
At midnight they finally took us into the showers, and the game recommenced:
ice cold water, screams, boiling water, screams, ice cold water! After the
shower we received clothes, underwear and even a hat - rather strange looking
but a hat nevertheless. Everything was blue and white striped, like convict
uniforms. They brought us to the third floor - dozens of tailors were sitting
there, and we had to wait, naked, while they sewed a red and yellow six-pointed
star with our personal numbers onto our trousers and coats. That's how we sat
until morning. In the morning they took us outside, still naked, with only our
shoes to protect us from the snow and the icy wind which pierced our flesh like
a knife. The reason for this was that the block leader had sent our clothes
back to be disinfected again. We stood there for about 45 minutes, but it
seemed like an eternity.
After
roll call they put us into the block. At the entrance I received my first slap for
some offense - to this day I don't know why. As a rule I remembered when I was
beaten and why, but this time I had no idea - apparently it was a cash
deposit...
At
noon we received our clothes and lunch - one liter of soup. I should mention
that the block was clean, with a red painted floor and a long carpet between
wooden beds. Each man had a bed, two blankets, a good, thick straw mattress and
a straw pillow. Exemplary cleanliness! Downstairs at the entrance were showers
and toilets. Everything was so clean it shone.
In
the afternoon we had another roll call for the new men, surrounded by block
leaders and SS guards. Once again they wrote down our names, numbers and
professions. People were assigned to blocks according to their professions,
each with its own block - I was listed as a stitcher and sent to "bakleidung werkstelle" (clothing workshops), in other words, shoemakers. They had no need
for a stitcher, so they made me into a shoemaker. There were two kinds: the
experts, who repaired leather shoes, and those like me (although some of us
were really good), who repaired wooden shoes. Nu, for that you really don't
need to be an academic with a diploma! I was certainly capable of hammering
iron nails, but sewing patches by hand? Out of the question, especially for
someone who never learned how it's done.
Luckily
I was with a friend from my town, Mendel Yungerman. He had a heart of gold, and
he was also a fine shoemaker. He sewed patches for me and I hammered nails for
him. We had to repair six pairs of shoes every day, and it was always the luck
of the draw: if I had six pairs that didn't need much repair, it was a good
day, I just needed to make sure that they "kept me busy" all day. But if I had
six pairs in tatters, I was in trouble. At nightfall, half an hour before we
stopped working, we had to clean up and hand in the repaired shoes. The kapo, a
non-Jewish Polish murderer, collected them. He had a helper, an old Polish
non-Jew, a really evil man. He would look for any reason to find fault with the
Jews, even a tiny nail in the wrong place. This he would gleefully report to
the kapo, who would administer a beating. The following day that shoe would be
added to the six "new" pairs.
Approximately
600 men worked in the workshops - shoemakers, stitchers, tailors, hat makers,
belt makers and ordinary laborers. It was a large place: cellars, two story
buildings and stables. Once it had been a Jewish factory - a very large tanning
plant. Stinking pools of water still remained. Murderous kapos were in charge,
under the supervision of the "uber meister" (director in chief), who was a
German citizen. It was said that he was a former concentration camp prisoner
who had been castrated for homosexual practices. I don't know how true that was
and it really doesn't matter. He was released from the concentration camp
because he had connections "in high places". Otherwise he would never have been
released - that was the rule. The Nazi monster intended, after victory, to
convert the concentration camps into labor towns where prisoners would remain
to the end of their days.
This
uber meister was a murderer, a real monster. He lived in a luxury apartment in
the middle of the plant. Whenever he came outside everyone trembled, not
knowing where to hide themselves... One evening I was sitting in a corner near
the pools, together with some other prisoners. We were working on women's hair.
Our job was to unbind braids and remove all hairclips and combs. I suddenly
spotted the sadist coming towards us with his special whip - the dried penis of
a bull. He was dragging a poor Jew with him. Even now when I think of it, I
shiver and my hair stands on end! He told him to stand next to the pool, and
then kicked him, so that he fell in. In winter the water was very cold, and the
smell was so foul it made you feel sick. Whenever the unfortunate man reached
the side of the pool, he received another hearty kick, until his head sank
beneath the surface. After repeating this several times he let the man out, but
for "dessert" he ordered him to lie down on a stool, and gave him 25 lashes
with his whip before leaving. Don't ask how the poor fellow survived. Perhaps
there are some Jews who have an extra soul under certain conditions - one soul
departs and another comes in its place. Or else the body develops some kind of
armor-plating to withstand all the sufferings and troubles of this world.
My
wooden shoes inflicted terrible sores on the soles of my feet. I didn't want to
see a doctor - I was afraid of them, but the kapo pulled me out of roll call
and forced me to line up with the sick people, because he saw that I couldn't
walk. I was sent to the hospital! I had a short brown coat, padded with cotton,
where I had hidden the 15 gold rubles. It was a wonderful hiding place. If they
carried out a search, nobody could find them, and even if they were found, I
had an excellent excuse - I had no idea they were there, since this coat was
the one they gave me. At the hospital they immediately took away my clothes, as
was customary in every new place. But they left my shoes! The 15 rubles went
with my clothes... I was taken to be shaved and showered, and from there
straight to the operating table. After the operation I shared a bed with two
other patients - the strongest one could lie in the bed but the other two were
obliged to sit. I "chose" to sit, because I didn't want even more pain after my
operation. I stayed there for a few days, receiving even less food than before.
They distributed less bread here because the patients didn't work. Those who worked
received an extra ration of bread twice weekly - 500 grams, half a loaf, as
well as 100 grams of sausage, which could be traded for a portion of bread (250
grams of bread). But this didn't apply in the hospital. A few days later I came
out of there, pale as chalk, but I wasn't returned to the shoemakers.
They
sent me to the group of "odd jobbers". This was a large group - approximately
400 men who were sent out to the "bau platz" (building site). Hundreds, perhaps
thousands of huts lay there waiting to be assembled, and our job was to load
them up on lorries for dispatch to all sorts of camps. There were even some
civilian workers there. The place was large, and the soldiers didn't stand near
us - they formed a ring at a distance to make sure nobody escaped. It wasn't
bad - there was always the chance of earning an extra piece of bread, but
seeing that I was new I stayed at the back of the group when we went in and out
of the camp. On the morning of the second day, during roll call, a short German kapo came by and took me and some others to do some work for him. Off we went
"like lambs to the slaughter"... I was with a very young German Jew and we were
supervised by the kapo, his "helper" and two SS men - four "dogs" altogether
against two Jews. Nu, would anybody envy us such a pleasure?
Thank
G-d I have always had the ability to adapt to every situation and every type of
work. As it is written "the Lord compensates for every shortcoming". For
example, when someone's leg is too short, his other leg is too long, in
compensation! That's how it is with me - there are always miracles in this
world. The kapo liked me, and he asked where I learned to work so well. Thank
heavens my sense of humor never deserted me, and I told him that I was still
learning in "Auschwitz Technical School". He found that most amusing, and asked
me, in that case, where's the university? I replied "in the bunker". There was
a cellar in the camp - "bunker" in German. Anyone who "sinned", depending on
the nature of his transgression, could be punished by the "routine" methods -
stoning, burning or strangulation, or they could be locked into the bunker,
without food, and severely beaten every day. Only those few fortunate people
who were exceptionally strong came out alive. From then on the kapo regularly
asked me when I planned to enter the university, and I would reply that "my
grades aren't good enough". This pleased him so much that nearly every day he
gave me his soup ration, or divided it between the young German and myself. The
gentiles almost burst with envy, but it stopped them from having fun at our
expense.
Once
we were guarded by two Ukrainian SS - these were quislings who had defected
from the Red Army to enlist in the German SS. Their "love" of Jews was well
known, and they wanted to make trouble for me, but they didn't succeed. An
angel stood between us, and all they could do was stand nearby and grind their
teeth like ravening dogs, hurling juicy Russian curses. I pretended not to
hear. When the soup pot arrived at lunchtime the kapo gave me an extra portion
as usual, and that's when the two dogs found a way to avenge themselves - they
ordered me to clean out the pot. They probably thought I would be humiliated,
not realizing that I could lick out everything that stuck to the sides and
bottom of the pot!
People
have different desires at different times. There is the desire for riches, for
happiness... Our greatest wish was for a bit of bread and a little soup to
relieve our hunger. Our pangs of hunger were so severe that they became an ache
in the stomach. Words cannot describe the skeletal figures who would drag
themselves to the buildings to scrabble in garbage barrels, hoping to find a
crust, even a rotten crust, or a moldy scrap of bread. But who was rich enough
to toss it away in the first place?
On
morning I decided to barter in order to earn something. I took my bread ration
and went out in the street. There were streets in Auschwitz, and a
"marketplace" between blocks 18 and 19. Anyone with something to buy or sell came
to the "market". There were those who lay in ambush to catch the "traders" and
snatch their loot. In the street I met a Russian and asked what he had for
sale. He had a package of coarse tobacco and a packet of thin cigarette papers.
What did he want for it? A bread ration. Good, we have a deal! Now, what do we
do with the tobacco? We go further. Along came someone looking for tobacco.
What will he give for it? One bread ration. So now I have one bread ration plus
a packet of cigarette papers. I found a customer for that too, and received
another half ration of bread. From that day on I became a trader!
But
everything comes to an end. When we came back from work that evening, instead
of dismissing us they brought us to the assembly grounds - never a good sign.
Something had happened or was about to happen! They had set up tables with
people sitting next to each. For every ten people who passed they stopped one
and wrote down his particulars, which could mean serious trouble. How could it
not involve me? If there's trouble, I'm sure to be in it! They wrote down my
name and block number - why? Only G-d knows. When I arrived at the block I was
informed that I would not go out to work the following day. I was going to the "transport" - I was being sent elsewhere. That night I dreamt that my mother ć"ě came to me to give me a pair of shoes as a gift... and I knew what
path I would take...
Everyone
left for work while I remained with the block servant. He was a Czech gentile,
but a good man. As a rule the Czechs were decent people. They may have hated
the Jews but they never raised a hand to us. On the contrary, they often gave
us a bit of bread or some soup... He told me to tidy the beds and straighten
the blankets, promising me in exchange a bowl of soup at lunchtime. I set to
work, and in one of the beds I felt some hard lumps in the mattress. When I
lifted the blanket I nearly fainted. There were bread rations wrapped in blue
paper and several containers of jam and oil. My mouth started to water and my
hand reached out to take the bread, when suddenly, like an echo, I heard the
word: "Thief". I snatched my hand away and ran from the bed, but my evil
inclination whispered "fool, you're going to die anyway. You're hungry. Take
some bread. That gentile has enough... Any minute now you'll be leaving this
place..." So I returned and put out my hand for the bread. Once again I heard
the echo: T H I E F. Again I fled and looked around, but there was nobody there
- only me and Satan.
My evil
inclination mocked me again "coward, fainthearted fool, help yourself to a
piece of bread." I bravely snatched a bread ration and ran like crazy from the
third floor to the bottom, gulping down the bread as I went. Oh Master of the
Universe, if there truly is a hell, I passed through all its seven portals that
day. Satan, my evil inclination, clung to me and taunted "Nu, idiot, what now?
The men will soon return from work and one of them will discover that his bread
ration is missing. He will start asking questions and then he'll find out.
They'll point to me and say this Jew is a thief. Then the block leader will
come with his helpers, they'll make me lie down in the corridor for everyone to
see, and they'll remind me that stealing is an offence!"
I wandered
around all day like a crazy man. I kept praying that they should come and take
me already - it doesn't matter where, just to get away from here... But G-d
doesn't answer every prayer, especially those of a "thief"... When night fell
the workers returned, everyone cheerful and talkative. Roll call passed
uneventfully, and then everyone ran upstairs to their beds, including me, but
my heart was bursting, not so much from fear as from shame. Not like a thief
but like a decent person who was caught in wrongdoing - there is a vast
difference between the two. My bed stood directly opposite the one where I
stole the bread. I stood next to my bed as usual, but my knees were trembling
as I watched the man's reaction to the theft... He was an intelligent person,
quite young, a Czech gentile. They were permitted to receive food packages from
home so they were never hungry. He climbed onto his bed, removed his shoes and
stripped off his shirt. Then he took his razor and wash things and went down to
shower, while I stood there trembling...
Eventually
he returned, donned his pajamas and took out his food. Then he noticed a bread
ration was missing. He didn't get excited. He just remarked: " A thief took my
bread ration. He was probably hungry. I wish him well." I nearly burst into
tears, I so much wanted to tell him that I was the thief, to thank him for
unwittingly forgiving me... It was then that I made up my mind that I would die
of starvation rather than take food from others!
Something
else happened a short while earlier. One Saturday I was attached to a work
party of about 60 men. They took us out of the gate to a truck covered with
canvas. Everyone rushed to climb in, but I waited a moment to make sure of a
handhold. Suddenly a received a blow from behind. I thought my head would
explode, but from experience I knew better than to turn and see who was beating
me, instead I leaped into the truck... We were taken to a field surrounded by a
wall, apparently part of an old prison. The SS dogs were rushing around, and it
was especially frightening for a "new" person like myself. The kapo pointed to
a huge square block of stone, almost one meter high, and told me to smash it
with a hammer and chisel - I've never seen anything like it in my life, neither
I nor my father ever smashed rocks. There was no time to think, so I attacked
the stone most energetically, but it "laughed" at me and didn't budge. I was
getting desperate - what should I do? The kapo returned and saw that I made
absolutely no headway. He was a decent fellow. He explained the geological
structure of the stone, showed me its "veins", how to place the chisel and hit
it with the hammer without too much effort, and the stone began to crumble. It
took me about one hour to smash half the rock and I decided to rest when the "dogs" weren't looking. The kapo returned later to see the results. Without
saying a word he brought me a two liter bowl of "chlebubka" - soup thickened
with stale bread. Whenever the murderers collected the parcels brought to
Auschwitz by the Jews on the trains, they gave the bread to the cooks who used
it to make this soup. It was known as "the best soup", and got its name from
the "chleb" (Polish for bread). That was my prize for working hard and learning
well. Thank heavens I only worked there for one day.
To
get back to my story. I spent two days in the block waiting to be sent away. At
noon of the third day we were ordered to assemble near the kitchen. We each
received 500 grams of bread and a piece of sausage made out of horsemeat... and
who knows what else! We were not aware at the time that this was all our food
for the next two days. We were loaded onto a freight train and after travelling
for two and a half hours we arrived at Sventochlowicz, not far from Katowicz. A
small train (kelman bahn) usually traveled this route.
We
walked from the station to a field with five wooden huts. Two more huts stood
outside the perimeter for the use of the SS - one was the office and the other
was their living quarters. We were divided into two huts, or blocks, as they
were called. One hut was the kitchen, and of the remaining two one was for
additional prisoners and the other housed the showers. There was no fence yet,
so this camp was used for Jews because Jews were not so quick to escape - the
whole world was hostile to them. Every gentile was willing to earn a kilo of
sugar for turning in an escaped Jew to the hangman. We waited around for two
days without going out to work. Once they asked for 5 volunteers, but I firmly believed
in never volunteering for anything. The 5 were sent to work in the kitchen, and
everyone envied them. One of them was a friend of mine, David Zachuk, who died
in Canada. When he came back from work he brought me a bit of salt, which was
all he could smuggle out. >From time to time they were able to eat beets,
cabbage or potatoes, but if they were caught they were severely beaten for
their "crime". Then another 10 volunteers were needed but again I didn't go. On
the third day they required "100 volunteers" and this time I couldn't get out
of it. They picked their "volunteers" with the aid of clubs, and I was "volunteered" along with the rest...
By this
time we were starving - for 4 days all we had to eat was a little watery soup
and one 200 gram slice of bread in the evening. Now we had to go to work! They
took us through town to the railway station, where a train stood waiting, its
carriages full of iron ore. Two men were assigned to each carriage, to shovel
out the ore. You take a bit on the shovel but you don't have the strength to
lift it... yet when you have no choice, you just do it. You either do what you
have to or you surrender your soul. Since everyone has only one soul, we all
want to hang on to it as long as possible!
By
the end of the day we had unloaded all of it. By evening our clothes were
reddish yellow, the color of rust, instead of white and blue stripes. The
following day everyone tried to get out of the work but it was impossible
because we were all recognized by the color of our clothes! We worked another
full day but fortunately for us the Company Director decided that it didn't pay
him to use such laborers. He said that two men should unload two carriages, not
one... We learned that the SS were supplying various firms with laborers, whose
wages were being paid to the government...
We
didn't work the next day, but when Saturday arrived, "in honor of the Shabbat"
they took us back to the station for another day of work, this time even more "delicate". We had to unload containers of scrap metal, each weighing at least
60 kilos, two men per carriage.
A
wooden plank formed a bridge between the carriages and the pile on the ground.
Kindly take hold of this container, without work gloves, on an empty stomach...
By the time we had unloaded the first one, our hands were crisscrossed with
cuts, streaming with blood. Finally I found two scraps of cloth to tie around
my hands, and continued working until nightfall, while my back felt as if it
were breaking. Once again, the company did not find this profitable, and
neither did I!!
Another
transport arrived the next day Jews and Christians, mainly Christians, who
filled the other two huts. We were divided into work details. Most of us went
to work in a munitions plant. To be one of a small group in such a small camp
means certain death, but to be one of a small work detail means even swifter
death... yet miracles always occur, thank G-d.
We
were supervised by a German meister. He was a civilian and an engineer by
profession, very serious, like all "yekkes". We were brought to a nearby field
near the munitions plant. Our small group was supposed to build a sewage line.
They added a civilian laborer to our group. He was a Pole, a good man and a
master craftsman. I had no idea what sewage was until it fell to my lot to
clean out a sewage pipe! The meister caught my eye and told me to accompany him
to take measurements. Did I have a choice? As the saying goes "A stone falls
wherever it's thrown". He now had a "new engineer"! Fortunately he took a
liking to me and he kept me at his side for a few days while he took
measurements. After that, whenever he needed someone to carry out more
complicated work which required some thought he would take me along together
with the Polish civilian, who became my friend and sometimes gave me a few
vegetables. I was tormented by hunger. Whenever my friend David Zachuk brought
me salt I would eat it and then drink a lot of water, to ease my hunger pangs.
Soon my legs swelled up, and I became dehydrated. Apart from my swollen legs
hardly anything remained of me. In 14 weeks I lost 40 kilo through starvation
and hard labor.
We
built a sewage line. Everyone dug a trench section 2 meters long, 1 meter wide
and 3 meters deep, every day. Our bodies dehydrated so much that in summer,
when we stood against a wall in the sunshine, we shivered with the cold. People
died like flies of starvation and overwork.
I
want to tell you a bit about Sventochlowicz Camp. Everyone in our block was
Jewish apart from the block leader ("blok eltester"), a German gentile who wasn't too
bad. He was deaf, and also worked as the block barber. I arranged a minyan
between the beds where we prayed every morning before leaving for work. All of
us were in mourning and we all wanted to say Kaddish. We started with ten men
but more kept joining us, until we also had Jews from other huts. Our deaf
block leader was unaware of this. Our hut became a "little synagogue" and this
continued until I left the camp.
One
of the block leaders was a Jew named Neumann, of cursed memory. He was the only
Jew I ever saw with a yellow-green six pointed star instead of a yellow-red one
like the other Jews. Yellow was for Jews and red for communists. As far as the
Nazis were concerned, every Jew was a communist! Green was for criminals. All
the Jews wore yellow-red stars except Neumann with his yellow-green -
apparently he was a notorious criminal. One day we were crowded into one of the
huts. I think it was a Sunday but I don't remember why we were there. Neuman
was passing the hut when he noticed through the window that someone was
smoking. It was the brother-in-law of Aharon Dubinsky from Shfaim. To this day
I have no idea where he found a cigarette. When one is destined for trouble,
Satan finds ways for him to find it... even going so far as to provide him with
a cigarette in the one place where they are impossible to find - leave it to
Satan!!! Neumann burst into the hut even though it was not his own hut... but
what difference did that make? When a wicked person is in command, he is sure
to exploit it. The man had just enough time to extinguish the cigarette without
leaving any traces, but the brute had excellent eyes, and anyway, it made no
difference to him if the fellow was guilty or not. He forced his victim to lie
down on the bench and administered 25 blows - it was frightful to watch! When
it was over, he swaggered out like a "hero". But the evildoer does not go
unpunished! One day I was told that after I left the camp he was caught by the
SS men for stealing food, and punished in the same way that he dished out so
generously to others - 25 blows! And then he was "dethroned"! Before the war
ended, the prisoners were transferred to Austria and Germany, and those from Sventochlowicz Camp were taken to Mauthausen in the Austrian Alps. When they
arrived there the gentiles informed them that Neumann was a block leader - that
was all they needed to hear! They beat him so hard that he begged them to kill
him and put him out of his misery. They forced him to stick his head into a
bucket of water and that's how he ended his life. That's what they told me.
I
keep remembering things: something was always happening - every hour, every
minute! Who could remember and relate everything? We were tortured all the
time, from morning to evening. Our entire lives were hell. Every second Sunday
was designated a "day of rest". That's when the murderers would invent all
kinds of "volunteer" jobs... On one such Sunday they made us unload ten boxcars
full of cement - as "volunteers", naturally. The murderers stood in two lines
with clubs, and we ran between them carrying sacks of cement, while they beat
us on our heads and backs. After all, the murderers wanted to finish the job as
fast as possible! The cement was hot and it burned our backs, but who cared
about it, when the murderers stood by and beat us with their clubs. It didn't
matter if the blows fell on our heads or our backs, the important thing was to
keep running with the sack of cement on our shoulders! Within two hours we "voluntarily" unloaded ten boxcars of cement...
On
another such free day we were taken out of the camp. Next to a huge pit, a kind
of pool, stood a mountain of garbage. Our job was to dump it into the pit,
hurrying back and forth while the SS stood by with dogs to encourage us to
"volunteer" faster... The railway tracks were not well built and our boxcar went off the
rails... The SS sergeant attacked me with a whip made of electric cables, and
began beating me on the head, while a huge dog, specially trained to "deal
with" prisoners, snarled at me. At one lunge he ripped my trousers from top to
bottom. Twice he sank his teeth into me, but there was nothing to bite into in
my leg - I was only skin and bone. The murderer shouted at the dog "nem fester"
- hold the Jew! The dog bit me twice and let me go, but the two-legged dog
didn't leave me alone until we had righted the boxcar and straightened the
track. When we returned to the camp someone asked me who the SS was beating so
hard. I replied that I didn't see... What could I tell others that they had not
already witnessed for themselves? It was enough that I knew.
One
of the soldiers was very young, perhaps 19 or 20, and he really looked like a
girl - blonde, rosy cheeked and round faced. So that's what we called him - "girl". He was a good boy, every now and again he threw us a piece of bread,
and he often joked with us. Whenever he was on guard we were delighted! We were
digging a huge sewage pit, perhaps 16 meter in diameter and over a meter deep,
when suddenly he was seized by a kind of madness, lowered his rifle from his
shoulder, and began beating someone with its stock. His victim fell to the
ground, but he didn't stop beating him until blood poured from his ears, nose
and mouth. Then he told him to stop
working and rest a while. A few seconds later he told the poor fellow to come
to the corner by the latrines that evening and he would give him some bread...
When he arrived, the guard threw him half a loaf with the remark "it was worth
it, wasn't it?"
I
mentioned earlier that the camp was not yet fenced in. They took me with
another ten men to dig holes for the fence posts in a potato field. We all fell
on the potatoes and gorged ourselves. Have you ever tried to eat a raw potato?
Try it! You'll save me the trouble of describing the taste. On the other side
of the field, not far from us, stood the SS hut, and one of the SS apparently
saw us eating, or perhaps he felt we were not working fast enough to please
him. I saw him running towards us with his club and warned the others - the
potatoes immediately "vanished back into the ground"... He dished out a few
blows and left... Soon after I was sent with a wheelbarrow to collect bricks to
place around the posts. It wasn't far from the field to the camp. Next to the
gate was the kitchen, with cabbage heads heaped nearby, but opposite the
kitchen was an army office. Through the open window I could see two soldiers
sitting at a table, their backs to the pile of cabbages. My evil inclination,
coupled with my hunger, tempted me, but I needed a plan to get a cabbage
without falling into the hands of the murderers. I carefully piled the bricks
onto the wheelbarrow, leaving a hole in the middle which I covered with another
brick. Then I wheeled the load over to the cabbages and stopped as if I needed
a rest. After a quick glance in each direction I snatched up a head of cabbage,
shoved it between the bricks, and moved on... I returned to the other men and
we all feasted like kings...
Before
daybreak we had to run to the showers half naked and wash. It was icy cold,
since we were so thin that our blood was never warm. One Jew took a chance by
wearing his shirt when he ran to the shower. He was spotted through the fence
by one of the SS, who rushed towards him like a cat after a mouse. The poor
fellow had already taken off his shirt in the shower, but how could such a
"crime" be overlooked?... He was ordered to strip completely. The showers were
arranged on long tables covered by metal sheets. Along the length of the table
ran a pipe with taps at regular intervals, about half a meter above the table.
We would stand on either side and wash in freezing water. The poor fellow was
forced to lie on the table, the taps were opened with full force, and he was
scrubbed with a brush made of straw bristles, until his entire body was covered
with blood. He was then permitted to get down from the table, while the
murderer licked his lips gleefully, like a cat after swallowing a mouse. G-d in
heaven, how I hated these butchers! How many prayers did I utter, how much did
I plead to see their defiled blood shed as they shed ours!
Those who had lost a great deal of weight and become dried out were called "musselmen". Most of them didn't eat the bread they were given because after
they ate, the bread would vanish but the hunger remained. Instead, they wrapped
it in rags and tied it to their belts, or to the string that held up their
trousers. In this way they felt that they still had something to eat. Their eyes
could see it, even as their souls slowly departed. One such fellow came to the
latrine, forgetting for a moment that he still had his bread. When he opened
his belt the bread fell into the pit. He stood there with a long stick, but the
hole was large and deep. He struggled very hard, and eventually he fished out
his bread, still wrapped in its rag. With my own eyes I saw this! I cannot
describe how it looked, with everything that was smeared on it. He washed it
off with a little water - and ate it!!! I wish I could feed it to the German
Chancellor, so that he would realize why he is paying reparations to his
victims!
There
was one soldier who always stood guard in the corner next to our hut. Naturally
he was outside the fence on a tower, equipped with a machine gun in addition to
his rifle. It was his nature to call over any prisoner he saw, as if he wanted
to ask a favor. The hut stood two meters from the fence, and as the prisoner
approached the guard would point his rifle at him and order him to lie down,
roll over and touch the fence, so that he would be electrocuted. Or else he
would tell the prisoner to get up and run back and forth, as close as possible
to the fence. He then had an excuse to shoot him, claiming that he was trying
to escape. Once I was nearby, forgetting his tricks, when he called to me. When
I came over he cocked his rifle and told me to start running. Off I went, but
when he yelled for me to come back I just kept on running - and fled!
In
the evening, when we returned from work, the lager kommandant (camp commander)
would be waiting to play a "game" with us. Everyone had to bend down, place one
finger on the ground and walk around it. Do you want to know what this feels
like? Try it, especially when you are "a little" hungry. After three or four
circles the head spins like a wheel... Everyone would fall over, and he would
kick our thin, hungry bodies with his boots.
One day
I was returning to work, freezing cold, although it was the middle of summer,
when I came across heavy piece of iron which was used for crushing rocks. I
held on to it and began pounding the earth, hoping to warm up, but from sheer
weakness I overbalanced and one finger was caught underneath the metal. My
finger bone fractured, and the bone stuck out!
An SS
butcher mounted his bicycle and ordered me to run in front of him all the way
to the camp. I couldn't make it to the hospital because of the pain in my hand,
and here he was ordering me to run!? But I ran, and how!!! Under normal
circumstances I could hardly walk, but fear lent wings to my feet! At the
clinic I was seen by the doctor, a Czech gentile prisoner, who used a bent
needle to "sew up" my finger without anesthetic. When he finished stitching he
told me in Czech that I was very brave! "And if I screamed with pain" I told
him, "you would have slapped me hard!" He laughed and agreed that I was right.
He gave me four hours off work... I asked him to write up a report so that I
could be returned to Auschwitz as a "musselman". This was in September 1943.
The doctor said "Listen, if I send you to Auschwitz, you're going to the
crematoria! And we've just heard great news - Mussolini is dead, and in two
weeks we'll be liberated!"
"This
may be true," I said, "but I'm going to die before that... I'm asking you
please to send me to Auschwitz. There's a 99% chance that I'll go to the
crematoria, but I still have 1% hope left..." And he agreed.
The
following day I went to work with my injured hand. Even the slightest movement
made my head explode with pain as I stood there, trying to dig a sewage ditch
with one hand... At midday an SS man called out my number and when I climbed
out of the ditch he again told me to run. Once again he was on a bicycle and
once again I ran... When I reached the camp they took away my hat and my shoes,
which was never a good sign...
They
told me to get into a vehicle with Red Cross markings. There were another two
prisoners inside, a Jew and a Polish gentile. We each received a bread ration and
off we went! We Jews gobbled up our bread but the Pole didn't even look at his,
he was so weak that he seemed about to die. I couldn't think of anything but
his bread, and my only hope was that he would died as fast as possible, so that
I could "inherit" his portion. He didn't die and I didn't inherit! In the
evening we arrived in Auschwitz. the truck stopped by the gate and Camp Kommandant Schwartz of cursed memory signaled us to move on, taking us to
Hospital Block 9. It was the night before Erev Yom Kippur.
As I dragged myself painfully down the steps, my good
friend Mendel Yungerman z"l came to greet me with the words "Shmuel,
you're a lucky man you're going to live! There was a selection this morning,
and nearly everyone was sent to the crematoria, but you're staying here!" I was
given a bed on the first floor, took a shower and went to bed. In the morning
we got up, were counted, made our beds and received our tea, but instead of
working we continued to lie in bed. At twelve noon we received a liter of soup
as usual, and then we went back to sleep. At nightfall I waited for my daily
bread ration but, annoyingly, the bread and tea arrived later that night. It
was Erev Yom Kippur, remember, and I very much wanted to fast on Yom Kippur, so
I decided not to eat! It wasn't difficult, because during the 14 weeks I spent
in Sventochlowicz I was almost always fasting anyway.
I received my soup ration at noon and kept it by
my bed until evening. In the evening I was also given bread, with which I broke
my 48 hour fast. I ate the bread with the soup, a real feast, but then I had
diarrhea (durchfal). Anyone who complained of diarrhea was immediately sent to
be gassed, so I spent the next day and night in the latrines - I hardly moved
from there! My brother-in-law Shmuel Chomsky heard that I had returned to
Auschwitz and came to visit me. He stood outside the latrine calling my name.
When I came to the window he asked me "to call" Shmuel Rubinstein - I was so
changed that he didn't recognize me! I tried to persuade him that it was truly
me but he insisted that I call "myself" until he was finally convinced and went
away. I was sure he'd gone to bring me a piece of bread, but my mistake! He
thought otherwise. Apparently he felt that if I was going to die anyway it
would be a waste of bread... and he didn't return.
They
had pills for diarrhea - they called them "charcoal pills". I found a Jewish
doctor, thinking that a Jew would be more merciful - I forgot that on Planet
Auschwitz there was no mercy. I asked him whether there was any possibility of
obtaining some charcoal pills. He asked whether I had diarrhea, and before I
could reply he slapped me and told me to run quickly to a doctor. I hastily
assured him that the pills were for a friend. He went away but the slap
remained with me! In the bed next to me lay an old German Jew, eating white
bread. He had a special diet because his Aryan wife sent him food parcels. I
had a silver spoon which he coveted, and I offered to trade my spoon for his
bread - I could always drink my soup directly from the bowl, but he didn't like
the idea. Instead he went to the block leader and complained that I had "stolen" his spoon... The block leader asked me for the spoon and handed it to
the other fellow, but at least he didn't beat me!
I
remained in Block 9 until Hoshana Rabah. The murderers always chose Shabbat and
Holy Days for their killings. On Hoshana Rabah the chief butcher, Dr. Mengele,
came to the Block and ordered "Juden Entrecht" - Jews get in line! We all
stripped naked and formed a line. The block leader brought a card index while
the murderer seated himself at a table by the window. Each person in turn was
ordered to turn around, so he could better view his victim. Then he asked "number?" and the block leader took out his card to record the verdict -
eternal life! So it went until my turn, which was one before the last. I was
fully aware that I had no hope, given my skeletal condition and overall
weakness. As I approached the table I walked confidently and fearlessly, as if
I was about to be liberated. As soon as I was told to turn around I called out
my number 98078, before he asked for it. This made him very angry, and he
barked: "Cursed, dirty Jew, your bones are still strong enough to continue
working, get out - schnell!". I had no choice! Only two of us remained. The
other fellow was my neighbor from Pruzany Ghetto. He mocked me: "Why did you do
it? Before he even asked, you gave him your number? You practically volunteered
for the gas chambers!" I replied: "Yes, smarty, out of 150 men I was the only
fool to volunteer my number before he asked for it. The others kept quiet, and
where are they now?" And I added: "Listen pal, there's no wisdom here, only
stupidity, but the hand of Providence can transform stupidity into wisdom, and
wisdom into stupidity!!!"
The
morning of Simchat Torah they brought trucks, loaded up all the people and took
them on their last journey, may the Lord avenge them. At the last moment they
released the Yekke who owned my spoon, and sent him back to the Block by virtue
of his Aryan wife. Only we three remained. My neighbor had already been there
for three months and apparently intended to remain there until we were
liberated! I suggested that he return to work but he wouldn't hear of it. The
day after Simchat Torah I approached the block leader and requested that my
name be removed from the "hospital" list. He looked at me pityingly and
replied: "Look what you look like, man! If you remain here for another two weeks
you can build up your strength before returning to work." I thanked him but
told him I preferred to work, so he asked where I would like to go. I asked for
the workshops, and he registered my request and sent me there.
In
block 13 I was welcomed by my friend from Birkenau, whose name I unfortunately
cannot remember. He gave me half a loaf of bread and a bowl of potatoes with
bits of meat. I gulped it down so fast that I hardly felt I had eaten. That
evening, when the group returned from work, I approached the kapo in charge of
the work detail, the same kapo who had been there four months ago. I told him
that I was a stitcher, not a shoemaker, but I wanted to remain in his group,
repairing wooden shoes. He agreed, and next day when I reported for work he placed
me next to the good shoemakers. It was my job to take apart torn shoes for use
as raw material. The work went very well... But two hours later the villain
changed his mind and replaced me with an expert shoemaker. I was sent to repair
shoes and that didn't go well at all... so he took a club to me, added some
slaps for good measure and threw me out. I was sent to do hard labor, chopping
wood and hauling loads bigger than I was, in the cold and the snow. Our kapo was
a young "mischling", half Jew and half German gentile, a real character,
who enjoyed taunting me. He ran back and forth to warm up, and each time he
came near I got a fist in the belly "just for fun". I knew I couldn't bear it
much longer, I felt I was staring death in the face, so I made up my mind "Let
me die with the Philistines", and grabbing a log of wood I brought it down on
his head! He was totally shocked and said in German: "Hey, man, I was only
joking". I replied: "If you want to joke, hit your head against the wall, then
I'll laugh too!" He stopped immediately, and soon we were friends again.
The
chief kapo was kapo Herman, of cursed memory. He was a very shrewd gentile and
a real criminal. Once I was dragging a very heavy load of logs by myself, when
he came by and lashed me three times on the head with his whip, which was made
of an ox penis, so supple that it wrapped itself around my face, leaving three
livid weal's.
Everyone
who worked with shoes had enough to eat, so they gave me their cold soup. I
swallowed as much as I could, but it made my stomach and legs swell, and during
the day my legs were like two barrels. When I lay down at night I raised them
above the level of my head so the swelling would subside. They became thinner
but my head swelled up instead, and I had swollen bags under my eyes. In the
morning I staggered drunkenly until midday, when the swelling again descended
to my legs. And so it continued every day, in both directions!!!
Nearby
was a stable with horses. One day we were sent there to chop white beets for the
horses. That was good - not only was it warm but we could eat beets together
with the horses - it was theirs by right and ours by theft! Unfortunately for
me, there was a young boy there, 12 or 13 years old, a Jew from Greece, who was
apparently kept by one of the kapos for homosexual purposes. Everyone spoilt
him, but for some reason he attached himself to me like a plague! He began
throwing beets at me - each one weighed at least a kilo and they were hard as
rocks. Eventually one of them hit me painfully and I couldn't take it any more
and smacked him hard. I had warned him several times, but he probably didn't
believe I would dare touch him. After I hit him he slunk away and I didn't see
him again...
One
day kapo Marschalek came by. He was a very smart gentile, very large, and
everyone was afraid of him! He was head kapo of the shoemakers, a first class
artisan, with eyes that saw everything, like the angel of death. Three hundred
shoemakers worked there, including stitchers and makers of wooden nails, and he
was in charge of everything except the other kapos and their helpers. He asked
whether anyone knew how to operate a sewing machine. In the ghetto I had worked
on such a machine, so naturally I presented myself. He set me to work on the
night shift, telling me to sleep during the day. But when I saw the machine, I
saw I had a real problem - only two thin needles remained, ideal for delicate
work like silk, but hardly suitable for stitching wooden shoes. I was in no
hurry to start working, but hunted around in the vain hope that I'd find
thicker needles. So I started anyway, and in no time at all I was left without
needles. This was very upsetting, and I prepared myself for the worst, all the
while searching desperately for more needles, but to no avail. It was hard for
me to believe that the day shift worked with such needles!
We
returned to the camp before daybreak, and I rushed to find some food. At one
block the helper asked if I was hungry, and when I answered "and how!" he
brought me 2 liters of soup, almost entirely frozen. I shoved my head into the
bowl and within seconds it was empty. When he saw how efficient I was at
emptying bowls he brought me another, and asked if I was still hungry, which I
was, so he brought a third bowl of soup and half a loaf of bread. Each bowl
held 2 liters of soup, but I swiftly downed the third as well. After thanking
him and washing out the bowls I returned to my block, where I received some
watery soup instead of tea, but at least it was hot. Another two liters of soup
and half a loaf of bread completed my feast, and I fell onto my bed and slept
soundly. But the day eventually ended and the thought of those two needles
increasingly pricked me, as I envisaged my reception from the kapo. Nothing to
be done about it, I only had G-d to turn to and pray that He would reply.
When
we arrived at work, the day shift was preparing to leave. The kapo yelled out:
"98078, get over here", and I approached him, shaking with fear. "What have you
done with the needles?" he demanded, at the top of his voice, and warned me
what would befall me if it ever happened again. But I could tell that he was
aware that with such needles it's impossible to mend shoes, so I kept my mouth
shut, and the incident was closed, thank G-d.
I
went to work and again found two thin needles - what on earth was I to do? I
decided not to sew. Instead I hunted high and low for needles because I simply
couldn't believe that the day shift used the thin ones. Finally I discovered,
hidden right inside the machine, a needle as thick as a nail. My joy was
indescribable. I set to work, repairing nearly 200 pairs of shoes during the
night, and all three needles remained intact. When I finished working I
returned the thick needle to its hiding place and inserted the thin ones where
I had found them. Everyone, including the kapo, was amazed that I had repaired
so many shoes with such flimsy needles - as if they had witnessed the miracle
of Hanukka - but I didn't reveal the secret. And so it continued all week. On
Friday night I dozed off at work and the needle hit a nail and broke! I had no
choice but to break one of the thin needles, to conceal my secret. The
following day one of the Jews on the day shift came to ask me for his needle. I
played the innocent and asked which needle he referred to. He replied: "You
should be aware that more than one person has died near that machine, and you
may not be spared either". There was only one way to reply to that - I grabbed
a wooden clog in one hand and his collar in the other, cursed him soundly in
Russian, and added "Are you threatening me? Because if so, you're going to die
right now!" Naturally I never laid a finger on him, but it sufficed.
Luckily
for me they cancelled the night shift, and the kapo placed me at the stitchers'
table, where I did practically nothing. All the others at that table were real
craftsmen, skilled at their work. The kapo realized this immediately, but it
would seem that the good Lord wanted to keep one remnant of my family alive,
because the kapo took a liking to me and sent me up on the roof, which was
piled with odd shoes in poor condition. I was instructed to sit there on my
own, taking them apart for use as raw material. I found a couple of dollars
right away, and realized that things were looking up! I had to decide whether I
wanted to live or die, and if I chose to live I would have to take myself in
hand!
Block
3 housed those who worked in "Canada"- the warehouses where they stored the
belongings of those destined for extermination. Some 300 people worked there,
and naturally they stole anything which could be bartered for food. One of them
was Baruch Steinberg, a Jew from Maltz. When I went to see him he offered me a
piece of bread, which I refused with thanks. He asked if I was embarrassed.
"No", I replied, "What I really want is to earn a piece of bread, so I'm asking
whether you have something I can sell." He gave me a shawl which cost half a
loaf, and told me I could get a whole loaf for it. All well and good, but I
didn't have half a loaf to buy it with, so I asked for credit and he agreed. I
rushed off to Block 14 which housed the electricians, 300 or more men who
worked outside the camp with free Polish gentiles and often traded with them.
On my way up the steps I met a Pole who asked if I had anything to trade. I
showed him the shawl and told him the price was one loaf. He offered three
quarters of a loaf. I stuck to my price but he stuck to his and I was so eager
to see the bread that I agreed. I removed my portion and hid the remainder
under my coat while I ran back to give it to Baruch. I ran because I was afraid
of losing it, and then I'd have nothing to give him. After receiving it he
asked me how much I made on the deal, but not wanting to lose status as a
businessman I assured me that I made plenty - "don't ask". Then I asked if he
had anything else. He didn't, but he introduced me to a friend who also had a
shawl, as well a dozen handkerchiefs, still in their original wrapping. He
wanted a whole loaf of bread, but agreed to let me take them on credit. Off I
went to the same gentile, and when he asked the price I told him I would take
nothing less than two loaves. He replied "One and three quarters". When I heard
that my whole being was filled with joy, and I agreed. He gave me one loaf of
camp bread and a smaller, "civilian", better quality loaf, explaining that the "civilian" loaf was worth three quarters of a camp loaf. I took the two loaves,
and suddenly had an inspiration - a true business idea! I brought the two
loaves to my creditor and told him to choose one, pointing out that the "civilian" loaf, while smaller, was better quality. He promptly chose it,
leaving me with a profit of five bread portions, representing five work days...
I
returned happily to my block, where my sister's husband Benjamin also lived .
As it happened, that day we received an extra half loaf of bread and 100 grams
of sausage. We always sold the sausage for an extra ration, while the half loaf
lasted for three days. "This time", I told him, "we're eating half a loaf with
sausage - today's a holiday". Then I explained how I earned five bread rations.
I gave him half a loaf, adding that G-d had showed me the way. My
brother-in-law was a very honest, simple soul, who always worked at the same
place and never earned extra rations. He had no idea how it was done. He
rejoiced with me...
From
then on, there was never a day that I didn't earn something. I stopped eating
their soup except at noon, so they wouldn't suspect that my diet had
drastically changed. The swelling went down as I began to eat the protein and
fat which I had lacked. I gradually returned to normal, gained weight and lost
my musselman appearance. I asked one of the tailors to make me a "suit" -
striped, of course, but new and well-fitting, and I got a new hat as well. I
kept myself clean and shaved regularly. A good appearance commands respect, and
no hooligan dared raise his hand to me. I had the reputation of being a fair
businessman - my word was my bond. Everyone with something to sell came to me.
We'd settle on a price and he'd go away satisfied. Anyone who wanted to buy
came to me as well. We'd settle on a price, each trusted the other, and in this
way we could continue to live...
I didn't
trade with just anybody, for a simple reason: it was all stolen property, so if
someone was caught he would spill the beans after the first slap... Also, I was
discovering all sorts of things hidden inside the shoes - diamonds, money and
gold. Then I was transferred to work in the cellar, where another 20 people
worked at taking the shoes apart. Afterwards they brought in girls to work
there as well. The warehouses were supervised by a German gentile, a real
thief, and his assistant Yudel, a young fellow, clever as a whip. They were
partners, and the SS man in charge of the whole thing was also in partnership
with them. The reason I'm telling you all this is because it involves me.
I
worked independently, receiving my instructions from the kapo. By now I was so
skilled that I only picked out shoes that weren't empty - I could spot them a
mile off. In the cellar were two kapos: one was a stupid old German gentile, a
real idiot. The other one was the bright young "mischling" - half Jew, half
German. Whenever the Germans decided to change his triangular symbol for a
six-pointed star he would make a fuss and always managed to persuade them to
postpone their decision - he was as smart as the devil.
In
the meantime they began to bring Jews from Hungary, and their shoes made their
way to our cellar. One day, a Jew was taking apart a shoe when a twenty dollar
gold coin fell out. That's serious money, and it rang out as it dropped onto
the cement. Quick as a flash the young fellow jumped up and grabbed it, telling
the Jew "If you want to know how to find money, you should learn from him" -
indicating me! I asked him whether he thought I'd ever found anything, and he
replied "No, never"...
One
day I came across a shoe which was almost entirely ripped, when I noticed a
gold thread poking out of its heel... I turned aside to remove the heel and
discovered a whole cache of gold: chains, rings, and a pair of earrings with 18
diamonds. I hid the earrings and sold the gold. Among the electricians was a
French Jew, a very bright lad, Zalke (Bezalel) was his name. We liked each
other very much and did most of our trading with each other. I brought the gold
to him, to trade for margarine or cigarettes. He asked how much I wanted and I
told him: "1800 cigarettes", which he agreed to, giving me a down payment of
100 cigarettes. Ten cigarettes were worth one loaf of bread. Twenty cigarettes
would get you half a kilo of margarine. Sixty cigarettes bought good sausage,
such as the SS ate. I bought bread, margarine and a whole sausage, which I
shared with my brother-in-law.... The next day Zalke came and complained that
it wasn't worth 1800 cigarettes. I said: "So give me 1600" and he went away
happy. In the meantime I took some more cigarettes, but he again complained
that he was losing on the deal, so I went down another 200 cigarettes. Two days
later he was back, trying to lower the price yet again. I had already received
1000 cigarettes and I was sick of the whole thing, so I said: "Zalke, I have a
favor to ask. I'm prepared to forget the 400 cigarettes you owe me, as long as
you don't go around saying you've found a stupid Jew and can do anything you
like with him." He got the hint and said: "Shmuel, I'll pay the 400 cigarettes
- I don't want anything." I replied, "In that case, I'll give you 100
cigarettes - it won't hurt me." So I took 300 cigarettes and we parted as
friends.
One day
Moshe Chomsky approached me. He said he had nothing to eat, and wanted me to
give him something to trade, so he could earn a piece of bread. I gave him a
large gold chain, telling him I wanted 100 cigarettes in return. The next day
he came to tell me that the price was too high, he wouldn't be able to earn on
such a deal. I said OK - give me 80, and I let him get as far as the door
before calling him back. "Moshe," I said, "Do you remember when I came from Sventochlovicz? I came to you hungry, swollen, unable to stand, and you gave me
half a loaf of bread. Now I have a request. I'm giving you the chain as a gift,
but only on condition that you promise me that if you ever need anything you'll
come straight to me, because I can never repay you for that bread." He "promised" and left.
There
was a munitions factory in Auschwitz where they made hand-grenades. Some
Hungarian girls worked there, including three sisters. They used to steal small
amounts of gunpowder and smuggle it to the "Sonderkommando" who worked in the
gas chambers and the crematoria. When they had collected enough gunpowder, they
blew up a crematorium, killed some SS and fled - about 100 of them. The SS
immediately took up their positions to prevent them from getting out of the
camp. Of course they were all caught, except for two or three who managed to
get away. They were shot, their bodies propped up on stools in two rows with
spades under their arms to keep them upright, and all the Birkenau inmates were
brought into the camp and forced to walk between the two rows, so they would
see them and fear! We were also brought into the camp - apparently they feared
a revolt! Naturally the Nazis conducted an intensive investigation to find out
where the gunpowder came from, and eventually they located the three sisters at
the factory. I saw them hanged - they stood erect with the noose around their
necks and shouted: "Down with Hitler!" The soldiers slapped them to shut them
up, but they only shouted louder, until the nooses were tightened around their
necks. May their memory be a blessing. That evening all the girls from the kommando were taken to the new shower stalls near Auschwitz. They were positive
they were being taken to the gas chambers but instead they found soldiers armed
with whips waiting for them. Each one was forced to bend over a stool, to make
it easier for the sadists to hit them, and then each girl received five lashes,
after which they were permitted to dress and return to the camp.
In
our cellar were some Hungarian Jews. No sooner had they arrived than they
learned the word "organizieren" (organizing), which was a euphemism for
stealing. When I heard them planning to steal shoes I warned them not to do it
until they had learned exactly how it was done. They didn't trust me,
suspecting that I feared there would be nothing left for me. Only once did I
ever steal a pair of shoes - for a woman from my hometown who let me know that
she was barefoot and wanted me to send her a pair. I was sorry for these Jews,
and didn't want them to be beaten, but they didn't heed my warning. One of them
put on a pair of shoes, leaving his own at work instead. That was certainly the
way to do it, but then he didn't know what to do when he sold his merchandise.
The next day he came to work barefoot, which was strictly forbidden in the
camp. Rags - yes, wooden clogs - yes, but never barefoot! When he reached the
gate an SS spotted him and asked the kapo to investigate. Since he was already
barefoot, he should have complained that his shoes had been stolen but no! As
soon as he arrived at work he rushed off to find his shoes and put them on. The
kapo came to ask him where he put his shoes yesterday, and the poor fellow was
soundly beaten. The right way to do it was to get some rags from your buyer and
wear them to work. At work you'd throw them away and put on your client's shoes
- that's what they needed to learn! It was impossible to teach them because a
fool would soon be caught and spill everything he'd been taught...
In
addition to all the things which came out of the gas chambers, such as single
shoes, all kinds of satchels and ripped shoes, they would bring tefillin and
tefillin straps. I used to collect them. I couldn't bury them, and I didn't
want to leave them lying around because they would become defiled, so I would
put them inside the stove when it wasn't in use, and pretty soon someone would
light it. I didn't know whether this was permitted or forbidden, but I had no
one to ask. It seemed right to me that they should be incinerated. One day a
Slovak SS, a truly frightful anti-semite and murderer, came in. He came across
a pair of tefillin and, catching hold of a German Jew, ordered him to put them
on. The Jew replied that he didn't know how, whereupon the SS drew his pistol
and threatened to kill him unless he obeyed. The terrified Jew complied, but
the gentile felt that it wasn't done correctly, and called me over to check whether
he had done it right. Naturally he hadn't, because he really didn't know how to
put on tefillin, but I replied "I have no idea." The SS then pointed his gun at
me and said "I'm going to shoot you like a cat". I replied "You can even shoot
me like a dog, I still have no idea." The German Jew got a slap, but he didn't
even lay a finger on me! The mischling kapo approached me and said: "You want
me to believe that you really don't know how to put on tefillin?" I answered "Don't talk nonsense. Let him give me the tefillin so that I can put them on
and pray in a quiet corner by myself, but not to make fun of me", and he agreed
that I was absolutely right.
On
one of the rare Sundays that we worked in Auschwitz I was in the cellar as
usual, with the shoemakers on the first floor, when suddenly they brought an
Algerian Jew down to the cellar. He was an unusual type, tall and dark, and he
had also been so severely beaten that he was almost at death's door. What had
happened? He spoke French and Arabic but no German. One of the shoemakers, a
gentile, had attempted to steal the uppers from a pair of boots. Unnoticed, he
then placed the lower sections under the Algerian's chair. When the kapo
discovered them, he asked who did it, but not only did the poor fellow not
know, he also couldn't answer. The kapo began to beat him, and soon the SS came
to see what was going on. The kapo showed him the boots and the SS decided that
it was sabotage and joined in the beating until the man fell and was carried
into the cellar. At this point the SS decided that a beating wasn't enough - he
wanted to finish him off. He picked up a hammer, placed one foot on the
unfortunate man's stomach and with all his strength aimed three blows at his
ribs. The fellow didn't even react. I was certain he had died, and so they left
him. When we returned to the camp we carried him with us on our shoulders and
laid him down on the ground next to our block. Then we went to be counted, but
to our misfortune they were one short, so they began to count again from the
beginning - in a camp of 20,000 people this took more than half an hour. Once
again, they were one short! They began searching and found a block servant who
had fallen asleep and didn't hear the summons to be counted. In an attempt to
protect him from a beating, we said that they forgot to count the dying man...
That didn't satisfy the camp kommandant and he began asking questions. He was
told that the SS had beaten the man to death. The SS was called for, because at
that time there was already a regulation prohibiting arbitrary beatings. The SS
justified himself by maintaining that the man was sabotaging the work.
Sabotage? That was already something else! In the meantime the fellow had been
sent to hospital. He returned two weeks later fit and well - it was amazing. He
was then hauled before the camp kommandant and sentenced to 25 lashes,
administered in the assembly yard! The poor fellow accepted his fate - did he
have a choice? Then he was sent to the bunker (the "cellar"). Luckily for him a
Jew from Lodz took him under his wing. He was a fine man, an athlete and a
boxer. Whenever he encountered an anti-semitic kapo or servant he dealt with
them very swiftly. When the Algerian arrived at the bunker this fine Jew looked
after him. He fed him and protected him from beatings. After a few weeks of
this treatment, the Algerian looked as if he'd been to a rest home...
I
already mentioned that we had an old, stupid kapo with us in the cellar. He was
as strong as an ox, and when the Hungarian Jews arrived he began beating them.
I wanted to show them that they needn't be afraid of him. Half an hour before
our work shift was over we had to sweep up and clean the place, but I hadn't
done so for a very long time. Instead I went to talk to a friend, to tell him I
had found something important. For some reason the kapo was in a strange mood,
and he decided to show us who's the boss, although until that time he never
bothered with me. He came at me, yelling at the top of his voice, demanding to
know why I wasn't helping. I swiftly made up an excuse and told him I had no
broom. Raising his voice even more, he informed me that there was a broom in
the corner. To show my contempt I began to saunter very slowly over to the
corner. The others noticed what was going on and began laughing, which really
enraged him. He snatched up a spade, with the intention of bringing it down on
my head. Thank heavens I was stronger by then. I caught hold of his hand,
pulled at the spade and tossed it away, shouting "Don't you dare touch me!"
while I kept his hand twisted behind his back. He tried to punch my nose with
his other hand but I grabbed that hand too, holding both hands behind his back.
He was practically foaming at the mouth as he yelled "Let me go!" I replied "If
you promise not to hit me, I'll release you". I held on a bit longer and then I
let him go. The others applauded and began to make fun of him - well, this was
really a revolt, this was going too far! He rushed upstairs and I knew I would
be in great trouble if he brought the "Meister", a Polish gentile who hated me
but with whom I had had few dealings until now. I began to prepare an
acceptable story, so that even if I was beaten, it would not be too bad.
Meanwhile the whistle sounded for us to leave the workplace and return to
camp... and the kapo didn't manage to tell on me. Tomorrow I may yet be
punished, but I still had time to come up with something. After the daily count
I saw the kapo relating the story to the "Meister". This changed the whole
situation. I appealed to two of my friends, the one who had fed me with
potatoes, bread and meat when I returned from the hospital and another who I
knew from the ghetto in Pruzany. They were both on good terms with the
"Meister". I told them what happened between the kapo and myself, together with
a story I had concocted as an excuse. I also offered them a bottle of vodka in
which to drown any anger or ill-feeling. They told me they didn't need my vodka
since they had some of their own, I shouldn't worry, everything would work out
fine. Some time later they came to tell me that the "Meister" would arrive in
the morning with a stick, he would yell at me ferociously, but I shouldn't
utter a word and that would be the end of the matter. The next morning I went
off happily and the kapo rubbed his hands in anticipation. I entered the cellar
and set to work, wasting no time, while the kapo awaited the other murderer,
but he'd already forgotten the whole story. The kapo lost patience and rushed
upstairs to remind him. A few minutes later I saw the "Meister" coming in with
a huge club, followed by the kapo. They both came over to me. "You tried to hit
the kapo? You know how I can hit you..." And he continued yelling, without
pause, until I couldn't restrain myself and said "But I've never seen you hit
anyone without good reason". He liked that, warned me to take care that it
shouldn't happen again, and walked away. The kapo looked like a whipped dog,
and he didn't speak to me for at least three weeks afterwards.
One morning
after the count the SS appeared, looking for able bodied Jews. Well, that
fitted my description exactly, so I had to do something fast. I hunched up one
shoulder and puffed out one cheek, and stood there looking like a pathetic
creature. They came by, looked me over, and went on. They were selecting men to
work in the gas chambers and crematoria. Only Jews worked there, and every six
months they killed them all and brought new workers, so no witnesses would
remain after the war. Afterwards the kapo came over, wanting to shake my hand.
I told him that I would only give him my hand after he admitted who was right.
He replied: "What happened in the past is past. Now let's live in peace", so I
gave him my hand and we shook on it.
Soon
after that an alarm was sounded [this was in the summer of 1944. Apparently it
refers to the American Air Force raid of September 1, 1944 in which 15 SS men
were killed and another 28 severely wounded. Forty prisoners were also killed,
including 23 Jews, and 65 prisoners were badly wounded, according to M.
Gilbert, P. 285. H. Rubinstein]. American warplanes came over and all the
workers were brought down to the cellar. The planes began to bomb us. That day
I happened to be seated opposite a large window, and two Poles asked to sit
there because they wanted to play chess. I moved away and went to sit on a pile
of shoes next to the wall, with my new "friend" the kapo nearby... Suddenly a
bomb fell on the building, penetrating the cellar and the stairwell, which was
believed to be the safest place... All the Jews were huddled there, because the
gentiles kept to the three stories which were all constructed of reinforced
concrete and as a rule the Jews kept their distance from the gentiles. The
blast shattered all the windows and a splinter pierced the throat of the kapo,
who died instantly. The man who took my seat was wounded - not severely, but
wounded nevertheless, while I escaped unscathed. The German who had told me
that I would end up in the crematoria was also killed. About 60 men were killed
and 120 wounded. I climbed out of a window and ran to help the wounded. I
reached the cellar via the stairs. There I saw a Jew covered with rubble up to
his neck, while a fire burned below. I began removing the stones, calling for
help as I did so. A French gentile came to my assistance, and together we
succeeded in freeing him. He was unharmed. A Jew lying at the side called to me
by my name, although I didn't recognize him - later I found out his name was Buchen. He told me his leg was broken, so I lifted him on my back and carried
him to the camp - it was then permitted to accompany an injured person without
escort. When we reached the camp, the gate was open and hundreds of gentiles
were rushing around to find out what had happened. Two of them took the wounded
man to hospital, while others brought a stool for me to sit and rest. Questions
rained down on me, but I answered in riddles, because I was so shocked and
confused that I didn't know what I was saying. I had the impression that the
whole building was destroyed and most of those inside killed or wounded. They
could see for themselves that many dead and wounded were being brought out...
The
night before it happened I dreamt that they stood us in rows and brought us
into a pit. We were not escorted by Germans but by soldiers in unfamiliar
uniforms similar to those of the Polish army. We realized that they were taking
us to be killed, and everyone was crying terribly. In my dream I said to them
"Why are you crying? G-d will help us at the last moment" - and then the bell
rang and I woke up! My good friend Mendel came to ask me about my dream - he
believed very deeply in my dreams - so I told him that I had a frightful dream
but it didn't matter, because G-d would help us and we would remain alive. When
he also returned safe and sound he kissed me and said "Shmuel, you are a true
prophet..."
For a
long time after that explosion, whenever the alarm was sounded those who were
at work would rush down to the cellars, while those in the block would run down
to the showers. From sheer panic, they would grip the pipes with their teeth -
it was not to be believed! Soon after the explosion all the Poles in Auschwitz
were sent to Germany, because the Russians were advancing and if any Poles escaped
they had somewhere to flee to and plenty of friends to help them hide. No
gentile Pole would hand over another Pole to the Germans. The Jews and the
Russians remained, together with Germans and others such as the Belgians and
the French. My brother-in-law Shmuel Chomsky who had visited me in hospital
came to see me. He's the one who saw me through the latrine window when I
returned from Sventochlowitz, and didn't even bring me a piece of bread. Now he
came crying to tell me that the Poles had left and he had nothing to eat. He
used to polish their shoes and they would give him food from the parcels sent
by their families. "Why are you crying"? I asked, "don't you have any more
shoes to polish? Or are you afraid that you'll go hungry? Don't worry, as long
as I'm alive and I have what to eat, you'll have too". I didn't even hint at
the way he treated me when I was almost dying of hunger. I held no grudge, but
kept my promise. I would take from my food, the very best, and endanger my life
by sneaking out to his block so we could eat together, and he would not be
shamed by having to come to me. That was the difference between us... I heard
that his girl friend was still alive, in Birkenau, so I gave him cigarettes and
nylon stockings to send her, so she would also have something to eat.
One
day I heard that Berel Weinstein, a Jew from Maltz, had fallen from a
roof and was now lying in hospital. I knew all about that hospital, because I'd
stayed there more than once, and I knew that the patients were very hungry. We
had just received an extra half ration of really good bread and some sausage,
so I ran to the hospital and shouted out his name. He appeared at the window,
and I told him to come downstairs, where I gave him the bread and sausage and
wished him a speedy recovery. On the way back I stopped to buy myself some
bread but I was told that there wasn't any. Why? Because today they conducted a
search and all the bread was confiscated. There was a group of about 100 bakers
who were responsible for baking bread for tens of thousands of prisoners and
SS. First they ate as much as they wanted, then they stole bread and smuggled
it into the camp. In addition they sold their own portions, so if you had what
to barter, you could always buy bread. But just today there was no bread to be
had. I returned to the block and asked the servant for my portion. "What", said
he, "didn't you receive half a loaf?" "I did," I replied, "but I didn't receive
the whole portion". "Well", he explained, "today the loaves were much bigger than
usual, so each piece was really three portions..." and I remained without
bread. I wandered around the camp, looking for food, but there was really none
to be had, so I stood still in the middle of the street, looked up to the
heavens and said "Lord of the Universe, why was I punished for the mitzva of
visiting the sick? Now I have no bread..." As I stood there, a young Russian
lad came by and asked quietly whether I would like to buy some white bread,
showing me a whole loaf. I asked what he wanted for it and he said the price
was 20 cigarettes. "Are you crazy? 20 cigarettes?" said I, but he asked whether
I was aware that today there was no bread, so I gave him 20 cigarettes and told
my brother-in-law Benjamin that instead of black bread, we're eating white
bread today...
Whenever
it was foggy in Auschwitz it would be very dark and we would go out to work
later than usual, after the fog lifted, because they were afraid that prisoners
might escape. One morning it was foggy for longer than usual. At ten o'clock,
when the fog showed no sign of lifting, they ordered that lunch should be
shared out, so they wouldn't need to "waste time" again at noon. They brought
the soup barrels and started doling it out. While this was still going on the
fog lifted and it became light. The order was given to stop giving out food.
The servants were delighted and began slapping everyone to make them move
faster. The full soup barrels remained standing by the steps on the third
floor. It really pained me to think of it, not for myself, but for those hungry
people who would now go the whole day without eating. I decided to get my
revenge on the servants, so as I passed by the barrels in that crush of people,
I dipped my bowl in, filled it with soup, and then with one strong kick I
overturned the barrel, spilling soup down the stairs and onto the heads of
those below... What a fuss! The servants had a lot of work to do, cleaning and
washing the stairs on all three floors as well as the corridor at the bottom!
As we
were returning from work one wintry day, it became impossible to move forward
because a crowd of people was clustered about 100 meters from the camp gate.
Such a thing had never happened before! It was always carefully organized so
that each work group arrived on time, one after another. One group would enter,
followed by the next, and so on. Such a mass of people was a sign that
something had happened - perhaps a search! We managed to advance a few more
meters and saw all sorts of things lying on the snow. Everyone began to throw
away everything in his possession, to avoid a beating. A Jewish boy stood in
front of me, and I could see that he was shaking with fear. I asked him what's
the matter and he told me that he had a bottle of vodka and didn't know whether
to throw it away or not. I told him that I could help him and instructed him to
change places with me and to tie the bottle tightly against his pelvis, using
his trousers. I explained that they would search me but not him. That's exactly
what happened... In my pocket was a rag which I wadded up over my stomach under
my coat, making my stomach stick out. Off I went with him right behind me,
until we reached the gate. Five dogs stood between the lines, searching
together with the secret police. As soon as I arrived I was grabbed by a
soldier and pulled out of the line. He yanked open my coat and hauled out - a
rag! The mountain had given birth to a mouse!!! He was most disappointed and
demanded an explanation. I told him that the rag was for repairing my mattress!
"So why was it hidden?" - "It wasn't hidden, I was cold so I put it under my
coat". "Get out of here, you idiot!" So off I went, me, the idiot, and the
smart Jew didn't know how to thank me. He was one of the very few who managed
to smuggle anything into the camp that day. For a Jew, a bottle of vodka
represented two weeks' worth of food... This is how we outsmarted each other:
the soldiers by immense strength, cruelty and terror, and we prisoners by
guile, cleverness and all manner of tricks... As soon as they uncovered one
channel of smuggling, we would think up two more, otherwise nobody could have
remained alive. The calories they fed us couldn't sustain life for more than
three or four months, and then only if the prisoners received the food they
were entitled to, which never happened because it was always stolen by all
sorts of parasites. In the kitchen it was the cooks, in the storehouses it was
the storekeeper and his helpers, and whatever arrived in the block was stolen
by the block leader and the servants. So how much finally reached the prisoner
at the end?
After
my finger was operated on, they gave me a week's sick leave to remain in the
block. Great! Exactly what I wanted - not to work on Rosh Hashana. I was back 5
days before Yom Kippur and I had to think of another ruse, because I didn't
want to work on Yom Kippur either. I returned to the doctor, who had a Jewish
male nurse working with him, and in exchange for a pack of cigarettes he gave
me three more days. Another 20 cigarettes earned me another 3 days - so I got
what I wanted...
On the
eve of Yom Kippur, instead of "Kol Nidrei" we heard shouts: "The whole camp
must report outside the showers - Selektzia!" The whole camp? It sounded like
some new trick, a new method of deceit. But did we have a choice? We went, block
after block, to the shower hut, Jews and gentiles together. There we stripped in
front of two block leaders and the SS in charge of assembly reports - he was a "volkdeutsch", a Pole who had adopted German citizenship. He sat on a stool
wielding a club, and if he didn't like the look of someone as they passed
before him he hit him with the club and the block leaders recorded his number.
Nobody quite knew what was going on, but common sense told another story,
although officially we knew nothing. I removed my bandage and walked straight,
and thank G-d I passed. That evening they collected all those whose numbers had
been recorded but then the gentiles were permitted to return to their places
and only the Jews were left, so it was clear that they were looking for Jews.
That entire night everyone was in panic, but the next morning the bell rang as
usual, and the usual routine was followed: getting up, drinking, washing,
dressing and going out to work. I was fasting and I was exempt from working. My
friend Mendel came to ask me what to do. He was a very devout Jew and he also
had an exemption from working that day. I looked through the window and noticed
that it was misty, like the fog on our hearts. I told him: "Mendel, today it's
a mitzvah to go to work - I advise you and I also beg you to go to work!" I had
spent a long time convincing him that today I wouldn't be going out to work,
but he listened to me and went out, while I remained behind! As soon as the
last prisoner passed through the gate they closed it and the orchestra stopped
playing. Then the order was given: "All those with work exemptions are to
assemble at the shower hut. A new selection! Once again I removed my bandage, squeezing
my finger so it would not look so pale. We entered the hut and stood in three
rows like the Hebrew letter ç. I was last in the first row on the left side.
The selection started from the right side. The murderer approached the first
man and demanded to know where he worked? Why was he exempt from work? For how
long? Was he a Jew? And his number was recorded. The same procedure was
repeated along the row. When he came to a gentile he released him. He had
already passed along the right side without releasing any Jews! The first of
our group suddenly sprang out of the door and fled! He was lucky. A few seconds
later the questions began again, and a Jew was dismissed! Meanwhile another one
of my group fled, but one of the block leaders noticed and ran after him, but
came back empty-handed. I also wanted to flee but I couldn't make up my mind.
Suddenly I noticed that he dismissed another two Jews who worked in important
jobs. One of those who had been dismissed was a bit confused and walked off
slowly, so he was recalled and his name recorded. My turn was coming up, and
I'd already decided not to run away. When I was asked why I wasn't working I
showed my finger, which I'd been pressing all the time so it looked redder. How
many days had I been off work? Only four days... When was I returning to work?
Tomorrow! Where did I work? In the factory. "Get out of here" - before he had
finished speaking I was gone! That was the price I paid for observing Yom
Kippur. Perhaps that was the reason why I remained alive?
In
1940 they built an Olympic-size swimming pool in Auschwitz. Every Sunday
everyone who wished could swim there and they even held competitions. This was
all for the benefit of the Red Cross. It went on until Christmas time. We
didn't know what was happening at the battlefront, although we knew the Germans
were suffering heavy losses. We gleaned our "news" from various signs, and when
we were outside the camp we sometimes came across an old German newspaper. I
would count the "crosses" - the obituary notices for officers and sergeants. I
never found an obituary for an ordinary soldier, but for every officer, I "counted" ten ordinary soldiers killed. Was this calculation accurate? I have
no idea. Perhaps it was wishful thinking, but it cheered my aching heart!
I
have not yet described the cruelty of the SS women. I didn't see many of them,
but what I saw was enough for me! Near their work place was a small camp of
women, most of them Hungarians. In the evening, when they came back from work,
they would hold an assembly to make sure nobody was missing. We could see them
clearly from our building, which was very close by. The women would come to
look for people they knew, or to talk, and sometimes we would throw them
something to eat, or a few cigarettes. One girl stood there, very close to the
fence, in order to hear better, because we weren't allowed raise our voices. An
SS woman spotted her and sneaked up behind her like a cat preying on a
canary... We couldn't warn the poor girl, and the bitch grabbed her by the hair
and drove her fist into her face. I think she broke her nose. After she left,
her victim fled back into her hut.
In
Auschwitz there was a block of young women who served as Mengele's guinea pigs.
Sometimes we saw them when they permitted them to walk about, accompanied,
naturally, so they wouldn't come in contact with men. Dr. Mengele the sadist
performed all kinds of brutal experiments on them. We heard about it through
rumors even though they were carefully guarded, some people managed to contact
them nevertheless, and nothing could be kept entirely secret.
Necessity
is the mother of invention... necessity provides special antibodies, helping us
to defend ourselves passively and if need be also actively! It teaches us to
devise tricks, to deceive the murderers and the sadists. "War is waged by
stealth", and this was a terrible war, a war of survival. A war between people
who were beyond the law, imprisoned, starved, naked and bereft of everything,
against a sadistic and cruel regime unparalleled in history. They had a mighty
army which had conquered half the world, which knew no bounds, which recognized
no laws, neither legal nor ethical. And yet the downtrodden ones found ways to
defend themselves and to stay alive. Whoever did not experience it and just
read about it, cannot understand. You may hear the stories related by simple
people but they don't have the skill to describe in clear pictures exactly how
it was, so that the listener feels the tragedy and comprehends the struggle to
go on living. Even the most talented cannot give an accurate picture to horrify
all the succeeding generations, when nobody is left to tell the tale of those
who passed through - when they are no longer alive. Those who experienced the
Holocaust are regarded as "sheep going meekly to the slaughter". Nobody
appreciates the bravery of these "sheep" who had no horns and no fence - or
rather, a fence which had been trampled on all sides by millions of tigers,
lions and wild beasts. Above them were murderers armed with hand grenades,
rifles and pistols, hunting their prey. Who can describe the feelings of a
person hiding in the chimney of an oven, while the ghetto is being liquidated
and the soldiers are going from house to house in case someone is hiding? They
ask why we didn't flee to the forests and join the partisans - as if everyone
could go into the forests! Could everyone join the partisans? What of the women
and the little ones? Who can describe the dangers lurking in the forests at the
hands of gentile partisans? The number of Jews who met their death at the hands
of gentile partisans has been repeated many times. Some lucky souls managed to
join up with organized partisan brigades, even bringing weapons with them. They
also suffered at the hands of the "friends". What strength of character and
nerves of steel were required of the Jews who passed themselves off as Aryans
(gentiles), how much wisdom and cunning was required not to let slip a single
word, day or night, even while asleep, among the families where they lived and
the places where they worked. Not only the Germans were after them. Millions of
gentiles assisted them, setting ambushes to catch Jews and thus earn one kilo
of sugar... And even if a Jew could congratulate himself on speaking the
language perfectly without a Jewish accent, what of the eternal "sign" of the
Jew? How many medical examinations did he have to undergo, how many communal
showers? How do you "hide" such a sign from those around you, especially those
who are particularly curious? Yet despite these hardships and difficulties,
hundreds and perhaps even thousands succeeding in outwitting the entire hostile
world and remaining alive.
3.6
1945
Let's
return to Auschwitz! Time doesn't stand still, it keeps going, whether we are experiencing
happiness and joy or sadness, grief and trouble. Every hour seemed to drag on
for a year, and every day was an eternity. It was only the nights, when they
let us sleep, that passed very quickly. And so we come to Christmas just prior
to 1945. That evening, while we were lying on our beds, the block fuhrer
entered. He was an SS sergeant, drunk, the eternal "hero". His appearance was
always a sign for mortal terror... one slap from him and you were thrown right
over and landed on the floor. And suddenly here he was, this sub human
creature, drunk... when unexpectedly and shamelessly he burst into tears. We
needed no honey to sweeten our lives, or butter to spread on our hearts. Could
anything in the world have given us more satisfaction? The "hero" stood there
and blubbered like any drunk, with his mouth wide open. He began to tell us
that the Russians were advancing, and every place they came to they raped and
killed the women. What were the women guilty of? And so on and so on... What
joy in our hearts, we wanted to dance and prance. What we really wanted was to
get off our beds and spit in the face of the swine - to drown him in it!
Suddenly there was justice in the world! They were raping their "innocent and
righteous" women - did you hear, they were even killing them! Had such a thing
ever happened before?
3.7
12/28/1944
Things
continued as usual until December 28, 1944. Before daybreak a strange noise was
heard in the block - everyone started talking because we didn't understand what
was going on. Meanwhile a gentile caught a Jewish thief who was an expert in
his field. He had stolen a food parcel from a gentile but unfortunately he was
caught and severely beaten, almost to death. I had wondered why he always
shaved his head, but that morning I learned that he never had hair. As a
professional thief he sometimes had to disguise himself, so he removed all his
hair and disguised himself by donning all manner of wigs. That morning I was
visited by a man from Maltz named Berel Weinstein, the same Berel who was once
in hospital when I brought him half a loaf and some sausage. He came to take his
leave of me, because they were starting to evacuate Auschwitz. He was holding a
small book of psalms ("Tehillim") which he'd kept hidden, and read a
few chapters. I gave him half a loaf for the way and I never saw him again - he
died somewhere, may the Lord avenge him.
Still nothing happened. As usual we prepared to go to
work. We ate - everyone who had breakfast - and went out to work. At noon we
received our lunch everything was the same as usual. We chatted and "prayed"
- perhaps a miracle would happen and they wouldn't have time to move us?
Perhaps the Russians would hurry and capture Auschwitz? There were rumors that
they had already taken Cracow - and that wasn't too far from here! At three in
the afternoon - another order! We were instructed to stop working, we were
returning to camp. When we arrived another order! Take two blankets and
prepare for the "march". We didn't know but we understood that this was a death
march! They sent us to the kitchen. Outside in the square stood crates filled
with tinned meat and preserves and piles of bread. Each person received a
one kilo loaf and a half-kilo tin of meat. Then we were taken to a block near
the gate and they herded us into a closed courtyard nearby. My brother in law
Benjamin was there and we also met Shmuel Chomsky who was in another block. He
told us that he was in the camp that afternoon, when suddenly he saw the
Russian prisoners breaking a window in the kitchen storeroom and hauling out
tins of meat. So he also jumped in and grabbed three tins. We made a quick
calculation and decided that if they had given us one whole loaf each four
ration portions then the march would continue for at least four days! The
kitchen would not be coming after us. What should we do? I discovered a way out
of the yard and, leaving my bread and meat with them, I ran back to the
kitchen, squeezed into the line and received another tin of meat and a loaf.
When I realized how easy it was, I went back yet again, and whispered to the
other guys that they should do the same, which they all managed successfully...
Before leaving I asked my friend Mendel Yungerman ć"ě, who was an expert
shoemaker, to hide some "serious" diamonds in the heels of my shoes, as well as
two platinum earrings set with large diamonds and a ring with a huge diamond. I
gave Shmuel Chomsky a pair of earrings set with 18 diamonds and two rings, one
with a slightly smaller diamond and the other a wedding ring. I gave my other
brother-in-law Benjamin 15 rubles in gold coins, hoping that at least one of us
would make it out. Mendel insisted that it was better to sew it into a belt
next to the buckle but I disagreed. Granted it was a lot of work hiding things
in shoe heels, but still... In the end I gave in. Shoes and a belt were the
only items that always remained with us. The rest of our clothes were always
taken away when we arrived somewhere new.
When night fell we received the order to move out.
At the gate stood soldiers, checking us as we went by. The thief who had been
caught that morning was walking in front of me, when the soldiers caught sight
of his wounds and returned him to the camp. I was sure they would kill him, but
after the war I heard that all the sick people who remained in the hospital
were liberated by the Russians a few days after we left Auschwitz. Sometimes
it's even worth a beating! We walked out between two fences that had been
erected all the way to the end of the camp, until we reached the highway. About
half a kilometer beyond the fence we came across the first corpse - a bullet to
the head and half his skull drained out like an empty can. We were accompanied
on both sides by armed SS guards. In the middle of the night we reached the
forest. Suddenly the order came to lie down in the ditch at the side of the
road. At the time I thought we may be destined to lie there permanently, but
when no shots rang out we all began to listen for the sound of Russian vehicles.
My imagination was working overtime, guessing at one thing after another, but I
was wrong. Once again we were ordered to get up and continue marching... We
went on until the morning, feeling very tired by now. Suddenly I noticed a
young fellow beginning to fall. A soldier had already spotted him too. He
pulled him by the sleeve and advised him, like a "good friend", to sit and rest
for a while. The SS went on and the boy was already dropping out of the line
when I pulled him back, wiped his face with snow and gave him my place in line,
taking his myself. I told him to keep going, or else he'd be killed. This is
how the murderers "took pity" on the weaker ones, letting them sit and rest
until the group passed, when the angels of death would come from the rear and
shoot them. The men started to get tired and threw their blankets away. I told
my friends to make an effort not to get rid of their blankets, it was like
throwing bread away. I even collected an extra blanket from those that had been
discarded. We carried on walking until the afternoon, when we arrived at a town
whose name I don't know - I didn't see any signposts. There was a large fenced
square, covered with snow, probably a sports field, where they let us sit and
rest. We spread out our blankets and sat down, taking out the bread and a tin
of meat and dividing them in four. The fact that the four of us were a united
team helped us a lot. If someone opened a can of meat by himself he had to
finish the whole thing, leaving nothing for the following day. After we had
rested for a little while the order came to get up and move on again. We
entered the town, and there we really felt and saw the war. Military vehicles
were rushing about, lots of people were in the streets, the shops were open. As
I passed a shop I saw that it was full of people and the back entrance was
ajar. I slipped inside, all the way to the back, planning to escape, when I
realized I was in prison clothes! So I returned to the group and continued
marching. In the evening we reached a farm with a huge barn filled with straw.
We all piled on top of the straw, the whole group including the boy I had
saved. We ate something and fell asleep. The date was Friday January 19, 1945.
Before dawn the boy hollowed out a space in the straw, all the way down to the
floor, and told me that he wanted to stay there in hiding. I told him not to
ask for suggestions. Nobody could advise him. Perhaps this place would be in
Russian hands within a day or two, but perhaps it would take a long time, and
on the last day the murderers might burn down the barn because they suspected
people were hiding there. Their brains hadn't entirely dried up! At any rate,
he decided to stay there. He clambered into his burrow and asked me to cover
him up with straw. I did so, and I would very much like to know what happened
to him afterwards. I never found out. I heard from others that for many days
prisoners were brought to that place, so perhaps he joined another group and
went off with them. Who knows?
On Saturday morning we set off again. There was no
counting and no assembly. We just arranged ourselves in lines and continued
walking. Not long afterwards we came to a small town or village. Two small
buildings stood at the edge of the place, far from the other cottages. They were
really small, with no doors or windows. To this day I sometimes think how easy
it would have been to escape from there. We lay outside with no opportunity to
sneak into the buildings. We had food but no water and the frost was very
harsh. We spread out our blankets on the snow and lay down to sleep. From
experience I advised everyone to remove their shoes because your feet freeze
faster inside your shoes. I also had a pair of gloves. I filled one with straw
and gave it to Shmuel Chomsky, keeping the other one for myself. I placed it on
the area of my kidneys and lay on top of it to protect my kidneys. We all lay
together, covered with lots of blankets, and I asked everyone who woke up to
wake the others so we could see who was still alive. In the morning when we
arose some people remained frozen on the ground because they had no blankets.
They fell asleep and soon they became numb and froze to death!
We
remained there until the afternoon. We were sure that by now there was no place
left to retreat and they were going to kill us right there. But no! Both
guesses were wrong. We were near a train station and they were simply waiting
for a train! In the afternoon we were ordered to move on. We arrived at the
station, where a freight train awaited us with open boxcars. We climbed up and
squashed into the boxcars. The cold wasn't so bad, we had all those blankets to
wrap ourselves in, and soon we were on our way. A small amount of food still
remained, because we were careful with it. But we needed water! Water - gevalt,
water! We traveled for four days. We passed Prague! The train stopped there
early in the morning and the laborers and Czech gentiles threw us their
breakfasts and lunches. Such good people, truly gold! Every one of them threw
something. The SS went crazy, trying to stop them. A woman came with a hand
cart laden with loaves of white bread which she began throwing into the box
carts. The SS chased her, trying to seize the bread. She fled, but managed to
throw the last of her bread into the end box cart before vanishing... It was
said, although I could not verify it, that while we were in Prague some people
managed to escape. We stayed there for about two hours before continuing on our
journey. We continued for another three days until we came to a place between
high mountains. There we alighted from the train frozen, exhausted, starving
and dying of thirst! Next to the road was a very narrow ditch where water still
flowed, although it was winter and the cold was unbearable. I fell onto the
ditch, snatched up water in my hands and drank...
As we
came closer, we saw some huts on the mountain and realized that we were
approaching that camp of ill-repute - Mauthausen. The first atrocity we saw was
this: a track led from the top of the mountain to the bottom, equipped with a
trolley of the sort that is used for transporting rocks to be crushed. But
instead of rocks we saw some prisoners in the trolley. They released the brakes
or the cable at the top I'm not sure how it was operated at any rate the
trolley hurtled down at top speed, and when it hit the bottom the prisoners
were actually crushed to a pulp! Only evil beasts could be capable of such a
thing. And this was not depravity for its own sake but for the sake of entertainment
and pleasure!
We
went up. A huge wooden hut stood next to the gate. They herded us into a space
of about three meters between the hut and the electrified fence. Night fell as
we waited in the Alpine cold. We began to search for water, water! There was a
kitchen at the other end of the hut, where gentiles worked, naturally. You
could buy water from them in exchange for a watch, gold, silver and so on. I
offered them a new shaving kit with blades and a little cup. They threw it back
you don't get water for such a small item! Meanwhile people began to enter
the building from the side next to the gate. We saw them enter, but nobody came
out, so we assumed it was a small gas chamber, otherwise how could it be that
nobody emerged? I tried to scrape some clean snow off the wall, but touched the
electrified wires by mistake. Fortunately I only received a mild electric shock
a kind of weird shiver thank G-d I escaped worse harm. We decided to sleep
on the snow... we'd already learned how... So we spread some blankets on the
snow, covered ourselves with more blankets and lay down to sleep until morning. Those in charge were Polish and German prisoners, well dressed in blue suits
with fine boots and clubs, as brutal and murderous as the Nazis. I was tired of
waiting in line, so I decided to enter the building, gas chamber or no, just to
end the suffering...
For
this we were also expected to pay for the right to enter "Paradise". I had no
choice but to hand over 3 watches for 5 of us. We were finally permitted to
enter. It was a basement, not very big, with a shower for 3-4 men. At a table
near the entrance stood a soldier wielding a club, with several helpers. We
were told to strip, keeping only our shoes and belt, but when I went towards
the showers, a soldier stopped me. First he took my belt and unpicked the seams
with a knife near the buckle, where he naturally discovered all my loot. Then
he started to interrogate me: :Where did you get this?" I explained that when
we left Auschwitz I had no belt, but on the way I saw a corpse and removed his
belt. I had no idea that these valuables were hidden inside. It was a feeble
excuse, but better than nothing! He continued: "Well, now I've profited,
haven't I?" I replied that it was possible, I really had no idea. "Weren't you
very rich at home?" he asked. I assured him that we were very poor and barely
had enough to eat. With that he stopped questioning me, delighting in his
windfall. He gave me three heavy blows and let me enter the shower. The next in
line was my friend Mendel who had thought up my "hiding place" the soldier
didn't even glance at my shoes! His belt was also unpicked, revealing 200
dollars. This was a very paltry prize, after the fortune he had taken from me,
but it earned Mendel 5 blows. Being very weak, he collapsed on the floor in a
faint. I was terrified that he would be killed so I grabbed him by the head and
dragged him into the shower, where I opened the cold tap to revive him.
When
we came out of the shower we were given torn shirts and underpants and they
sent us outside. Those who finished showering before us were waiting for more
people to join them. Then we discovered the secret of what happened to those
who entered but were not seen leaving the building. We thought they had been put
to death, but it turned out that they simply left by a different door. We
joined them and together we waited for more people to arrive. The cold was
indescribable. We were almost naked after our shower, standing in the Alps in
the middle of winter in driving wind, frost and snow. Eventually they brought
us to a warm hut, with a pile of mattresses on the floor. We were dropping with
exhaustion, hunger and thirst, but we were strictly forbidden even to sit on
the floor. We were forced to stand until nightfall, when they took us to
another hut where the floor was covered in snow, the windows were open and we
were surrounded by "officials" seated at tables. If it was cold during the day,
you can imagine how cold it was at night. They recorded our particulars and
issued each man a new number made of tin, which was tied around our wrists with
metal wire. They kept us there until 11:00 p.m. and then we were taken to yet
another hut. We entered and recoiled in shock people were lying on the floor
as if dead, wedged together like fish in a barrel - rows and rows of bodies
lying head to toe without even a centimeter of space between them. The room was
not large, but at least 50 more men had just been brought in. They started
waking them up to make room for us. The servants brought out their clubs and
began beating them, hitting one on his head, another on his feet. And these
people, who looked as if they were already dead, began to lift their heavy,
tired bodies. They were ordered to sit with their legs apart so that others
could sit between them. This is how they remained all night. They sat in rows
and soon the room became unbearably hot and people started screaming. T he
servants returned with their clubs and brought them smashing down on a few
heads, and soon it was quiet... If they opened the windows, those who sat
nearby froze, so they closed them again. Meanwhile the crowd of people fell
asleep sitting up, which spoiled the neat rows, so in came the servants with
their clubs to tidy them up again. This went on all night, every hour!
In
the morning we arose and went outside to be counted. Try to stand in the biting
cold wearing nothing but a torn shirt! When the counting was over we returned to
the hut. We were forbidden to sit or lie down - only to stand! They gave us
some tea. After seven days and nights we had only been given a little hot
water, and we had no water to drink! As I left the room I saw barrels full of
water in which stood all kinds of brooms, in case of fire. I tried to drink it,
but it stank too badly. At the toilet bowl I let the water run for a while and
using my hand I managed to scoop up some to drink. We were forced to remain
standing all day, and in the evening we received a piece of bread with hot
water. Once again we had to sleep in the same fashion as the night before. We
spent three days like this - on our feet and naked...
Thank
G-d on the evening of the third day they brought us clothes and coats. We
dressed and were taken to a train with closed carriages. One soldier
accompanied each carriage, and it was so cold that he permitted us to pry up a
floorboard, break it in pieces and burn it for the heat. I don't know how long
we traveled two or three hours but eventually we arrived at Ebenezer. The
train stopped far from the station so people wouldn't see us, and when we
jumped out of the carriage we landed in snow up to our waists. Then we had to
walk 4 or 5 kilometers. On the way we passed a hill where we saw some people.
The dust was as thick as fog, and the lights around were yellow with dust. The
people appeared like ghosts, wrapped in cement sacks to protect themselves from
the cold, as they dragged rocks. Well, this certainly "cheered us up"
3.10
Ebenezer Camp
The
camp was about 2 kilometers further on. A fat SS with a long stick awaited us
in the middle of the road. He walked between the lines and began beating us
left and right, splitting heads open. This was our "welcome"... We later
learned that he was the camp kommandant. Once again we were taken to the
showers and again they changed our clothes. At daybreak we arrived at a hut
with beds and mattresses, and were divided up two to a bed. We dropped onto
those beds and slept. Rothschild himself never slept as sweetly as we did that
night... and they let us sleep until quite late!
After
that sleep they took us to the showers, where I finally had clean water to
drink for the first time in ten days. We washed our hands and faces, but there
was nothing to dry ourselves with. One sleeve of my shirt was coming unraveled
so I pulled it off entirely and used it to dry my hands and face before
replacing it on my arm to dry. This sleeve served as both towel and sleeve for
the next 4 months. During that time we never once received a clean shirt or a
towel. I had a fine, elegant pair of shoes because when I worked in the shoe
warehouse in Auschwitz I could take my pick of the merchandise. But was
suitable for Auschwitz was not suitable for Ebenezer. In Auschwitz there were
roads and we worked in a clean, comfortable warehouse, but this was not the
case in Ebenezer. Here we had to work outside, on roads covered with snow and
mud, in terrible weather. It rained or snowed every day. Within an hour my
shoes had turned to rags, my feet were wet and frozen, and I had to find
another pair of shoes. The best was a pair of wooden clogs - but where could I
find them in this "jungle"? I decided to ask the block leader, a thieving dolt
of a Pole. I took him an engagement ring that Shmuel Chomsky managed to save
and in exchange he found me wooden clogs. I kept these until my imprisonment
ended. When we returned from work in the evening my rags were wet so I spread
them on my bed and lay down to dry them out or at least to warm them a little,
so that I put on warm rags in the morning - but half an hour later it was
already a different story...
"Tea
is served morning and evening"... We were already accustomed to the evenings.
From the Nazis you learned to adapt to everything very quickly! As for the
mornings: the first morning we received a bowl large enough to hold 3 liters of
hot water in place of tea... that was supposed to feed ten people! All ten
stood in a circle and the bowl passed from hand to hand. Each person received
one mouthful! Naturally everyone tried to make it a big mouthful. The bowl went
around, with each man watching the next one like a hawk to make sure he didn't
take too much, until it was empty...
That
first night we were sent to work on the night shift. In the mountains they
smashed rocks by dynamiting them in a tunnel. Our job was to clear rocks off
the "ceiling" so they wouldn't fall on people's heads, pile them up and load
them into carts, to be hauled away. The rocks were then pulverized for paving
roads and building cement walls inside the tunnels. They built a network of
tunnels which extended for many kilometers, intending to place all the military
industry inside to protect it from bombs.
There
was a young fellow with me from Lodz, named Asher Sitko. He was also my
"bedmate", because we slept two to a bed. The kapo was a Ukrainian Russian who
hated Jews, and his helper, also Ukrainian, also hated us. They thought I was
Russian because I'd spoken to them a few words in Russian. Even though they had
electric lights it was always dark in there, because we were all covered with
dust from the rocks, so he never saw my Magen David. I told Asher Sitko not to
open his mouth, so we could get through the night shift without being beaten.
Early
next morning, after work, we came out to be counted before returning to the
camp. A Pole came over to me and said something in Polish, and without thinking
I replied in the same language. The kapo was astonished: "How come this Jew
replies in Russian when spoken to in Russian, and replies in Polish when spoken
to in Polish?" He raised his club and prepared to bring it down on my head. At
the last second I yelled out "So what do you lose by it?" He lowered the club
and cursed me in Russian, but left me alone. After the counting, just before we
returned to camp, he again wanted to hit me, but restrained himself, hissing in
Russian: "Here you don't sit in offices, here you have to work..." It's true
that in Russia the Jews sat in offices and the gentiles did the work, but here
it was different...
The
second night we were also sent to work in the tunnels, but this time we worked
in tunnels which had been completed and were ready for machinery. Near the
tunnels stood a train, laden with heavy machines which we had to unload and
transfer to their permanent positions. We were received by a "meister"
(civilian professional), an Austrian wielding a cable, a Ukrainian kapo and his
Ukrainian helper, both equipped with clubs as their "badges of rank". We were
divided into three groups and shown three extremely heavy machines which had
already been unloaded. The meister explained the principles of hauling the
machinery. All well and good! They were to be moved by means of three pipes.
First of all the machine was raised so that a pipe could be inserted
underneath, then we gave a slight push so that the pipe reached the middle of
the machine. The second pipe was then inserted. Another push and the first pipe
reached the other end, the second reached the middle and the third was pushed
under while the first came out. It worked very well and the machine was
gradually moved into its place. One of us had the job of changing the pipes.
The kapo and his helpers supervised the other two groups, while the meister
remained with us, yelling "faster, faster" as he beat us with his rubber cable
filled with steel wires. I didn't receive any blows, but made a terrific
commotion with my yells of encouragement, making sure that we all pushed at the
same time so that the work would proceed faster. The men in the other groups
were really unfortunate. They were at the mercy of the Ukrainians who couldn't
explain anything, all they could do was beat their victims, which they
thoroughly enjoyed. But the meister didn't mind beating us either, and the men
were crying out in pain. I tried to comfort them - I knew from experience that
the meister would not remain with us all night, and I was right. At ten o'clock
he turned to me and announced that he was putting me in charge of the group. We
were to work swiftly and make sure the machine was moved to its designated
spot, which was pretty far away, but not impossible. He made a mark on the wall
and another on the floor, then he recorded the time and left. I suggested that
we move the machine a few meters and then take a break. That became our work
pattern - we paused to rest every few meters, continuing gradually, like the
Jewish soldier in the Tsar's army who rested after every shot he fired... The
work progressed far better without the fear and the beatings. At midnight they gave
us a liter of soup, which we hadn't expected...
We
spent several nights working there and the meister came to depend on me. He
also showed us how to unload the machinery from the train. That too was an art otherwise one could easily be killed!, I was a good pupil, as they say, and
soon learned this as well. On the third or fourth night the kapo became very
angry and demanded to know why I had earned such privileges, and why I wasn't
beaten like the rest. He rushed over to my group and without a word began to
beat one of my men. I'm a very impulsive person, given to quick decisions. I
grabbed my iron crowbar and raised it above my head as if I were about to hit
him. He jumped aside and I threw my crowbar on the ground. Then I began to
curse him at the top of my voice in Russian, using every juicy oath I could
think of. The meister happened to be somewhere in the tunnel, and when he heard
my yells he came running to find out what's going on. I informed him that the
Russian swine was interfering with my workers, he was beating them so hard that
they couldn't work. He was furious, and warned the kapo that if he ever again
interfered with our group he'd teach him a lesson. The rest of the men promptly
ran over to join "my" group - but how could I take them all?
My
pal Asher was in my group, as well as a Czech Jew whose name I don't remember.
I regret this very much, because I would very much like to find him. I know he
remained alive! He was a fine man, learned, refined, G-d fearing and very wise.
There aren't many like him. One night as he went to the latrines he was caught
by the SS and some kapos who beat him so badly that he barely managed to crawl
back. My heart almost burst to see him like that, but I didn't know how to help
him. In one corner was a pile of branches, so I told him to lie on the ground
while I covered him with the branches. He lay there for the rest of the night
until he recovered somewhat and made it back to the camp. We were given tea to
drink and then went to sleep.
Our
strength was gradually being sapped by the hunger, the arduous labor and the
long work shifts twelve hours at a stretch. My brother in law still had some
of my valuables 15 Russian rubles in gold coins, a Czech diamond ring and a
pair of earrings with 18 large genuine diamonds. I began looking for ways to
exchange them for food. Ebenezer wasn't Auschwitz - one had to be doubly
careful.
Our
bunks were on three levels. My "bedmate" and I shared a top bunk. In the middle
were some Jews who I only knew by sight, we weren't really well acquainted. One
Sunday when we were not working we were lying on our beds (by the way, we
worked 13 days at a stretch and the fourteenth was free). I noticed that the
two men beneath us had pulled their blanket over their heads and were eating
something. I figured that if they were eating camp bread they had no need for
secrecy, so their food was either stolen or bartered. It was certainly worth
looking into...
I
raised a corner of their blanket and said: "Don't be alarmed, I only want your
advice. I noticed that you were eating in secret - that's a good sign! If it
was camp bread, you wouldn't bother to hide it. I have some things to sell but
don't know who to turn to. Perhaps you can help? That way we can all benefit."
They were most enthusiastic: "Absolutely, we have great connections here. Just
hand over your merchandise and you'll receive whatever you want..." I replied "innocently":
"I can't give you anything, and I don't have any requests either.
What I really want is to know how to earn a bread ration to ease my hunger
pangs". They instructed me to bring whatever I had, so I took the ring with the
stone from my brother in law and decided to take a chance. Meanwhile I
discovered their names Yankel and Leibel. I gave them the ring, informing that
I wanted in exchange 10 dollars or 10 loaves of bread (a loaf of bread was
worth a dollar). They agreed, took the ring, and informed me that I could get
sausage, margarine or bread - what did I prefer? But then they returned it to
me, saying the stone was fake, not worth more than two dollars or two loaves of
bread. I realized that they had dealings with experts, and furthermore I
believed they were honest and not trying to cheat me. But for all my caution, I
fell into a trap anyway. I brought them an earring in place of the ring,
telling them that I had the other earring as well. They were delighted, once
again promising all kinds of things, I should just name my price. I asked for
100 dollars, fifty in cash and fifty in merchandise bread, a bit of margarine
and a piece of sausage. "Great, fine, it's a deal" - they took the earring and
said everything's OK. "So where's my cash?" I asked. "Well, there aren't any
dollars, you'll have to take it all in food..."
It was
clear to me that I'd been cheated. I told them I'd have to check it out since
the terms of our agreement had changed, and they agreed. I didn't get back to
them until nightfall, because I spent the day trying to figure out ways to save
the situation. The other earring was hidden in my pocket. My trousers were tied
at the waist and at the bottom with steel wire...
That night we went out to work. In the middle of the night we were standing with a heavy piece of machinery near the passageway to another tunnel. At the time it was boarded up so we couldn't see the other side. We were resting, but I was yelling the whole time, as if I was encouraging my team to keep working. An SS murderer on the other side spotted us through a crack in the boards. He rushed round to our side and discovered us taking a break. He came straight over to me and pulled out my pocket, slashed it with a knife and threw it aside. You can imagine how my heart dropped. But I smiled and looked him straight in the eye. He demanded to know what I found so amusing and why I was laughing so cheekily, but I replied "Not cheeky, I was just being friendly". He slapped me and left, and I rushed to pick up my pocket, but to my amazement the earring was gone! Unable to believe that such a thing could have happened, I continued searching until I discovered a hole in the pocket. This was truly the finger of G-d - I had been saved from certain death! Someone must have informed on me! On the other hand, I deeply regretted the loss of the earring. I untied the wires at the bottom of my trousers and began shaking them in case it had fallen down nothing! My only remaining hope was that I would find it on or next to my bed. When we returned to the hut I rushed to search for it, but to no avail, and finally I despaired of finding it. After the evening tea I undressed before going to sleep, and carefully examined my trousers from the inside. There I discovered an inside patch, one corner of which had come undone, and there was the earring, which had fallen between the patch and the fabric. My joy knew no bounds! On the one hand I had been saved from a sure death, and on the other - no harm had befallen me! I looked upon it as Divine providence, as well as an excellent excuse for the two scoundrels who were trying to trick me. I continued to devise a plan to get the other earring out of their hands, and eventually came up with a story: "A catastrophe - the other fellow lost the other earring and now he's forced to accept 25 dollars instead of 50 for the remaining earring". This was the best indication that the story was true, otherwise why would someone be prepared to take a loss of 50 percent? They promptly replied: "Nothing doing. The other earring must also be handed over, otherwise this will end badly". This was the proof that they were swindlers and crooks. A different approach was obviously called for!
I
left the earring as if I had forgotten about it, and went to see a Jew who had
some dollars. I told him the whole story and asked him to give me 100 dollars
for a few minutes, so I could lay a trap for the crooks. I wanted to bait it
with something tasty, as one does for rats. Then I went to Leibel, told him
that I only wanted to do business with him because I didn't trust Yankel,
showed him the money and asked what I could buy with it. Leibel almost jumped
with joy, saying: "I knew it - that idiot was spoiling things for me. I
can get you 100 loaves of bread for that amount of cash". "Sssshhhh", said I, "I could
get the same amount for 70 loaves, and the two of us could make a very tidy
profit". He was most enthusiastic, "Let's do it!" But I said "Not so fast,
first I have to go back and settle the price" and I returned the money to my
friend, telling him I had prepared the trap but didn't know what would come of
it. Then I returned to Leibel. "Nu, where's the 100 dollars?" he asked. I
replied "My contact agrees, but first he wants the earring back". Leibel, for
all that he was a scoundrel, was also very stupid. "Big deal," said he, "here's
the earring" - and he returned it to me! The rat had been caught in the trap! I
ran to give my brother in law both earrings, telling him that my trick had
succeeded but my troubles were not yet over. In that I was entirely correct!
I kept
out of the way until the evening, when I went to work. The other two worked the
day shift, so there wasn't much chance we would meet. The only opportunity was
on the free Sunday, which only occurred once every two weeks. Being experienced
crooks they couldn't accept the shame of being outwitted by a simple man who
turned out to be a lot smarter than they were. This was intolerable!
As a
rule we were all counted at the same time, after one shift returned from work
but before the next shift went out. Before the counting began, they got hold of
me and warned me that if I didn't give them both earrings plus 100 dollars it
would go very badly with me! "What do you want, I should go find my contact
right now? Wait for the free Sunday and I'll hand him over to you. You should
both be ashamed of yourselves why am I to blame for falling between two such
scoundrels..."
Meanwhile,
yet another miracle happened... Since we worked at night, we slept during the
day. We were in a place which was sometimes reached by American and British
warplanes, and when the alarm was sounded we were all forced to rush to the
shelter, which was located outside the fence, in the tunnels. It happened more
than once that a man missed his footing through sheer exhaustion and fell onto
the electrified wires, where he burnt to death. Sleep was becoming impossible
and even the murderers were aware of this, so they moved us to another hut
together with all the other workers on the night shift, and we were exempt from
running to the shelters whenever the alarm sounded. I was delighted with the
change, hoping that the crooks would not be able to find me and would leave me
alone. In this, too, I was mistaken...
One
day I was sleeping the sleep of the just, with my blanket over my head. Next to
me slept my buddy and in the next bed was my learned Czech friend. Suddenly my
blanket was yanked away to reveal Leibel the crook, who appeared to be crying! Through his tears he said:
"Get up, quick! Big trouble! I got 25 lashes without
revealing anything, but as soon as they started to beat Yankel he owned up and
admitted that you have the dollars and diamonds. Now the SS is waiting for
you." I wasn't sure whether to believe him, but I said: "Look, what's the point
of me coming with you? We'll both be beaten. No dollars will come out of this. I
told you we must wait for the next free Sunday to settle the matter." Leibel
the stupid crook thought he would scare me with his tale about the SS and I
would hand over the diamonds together with the dollars. He had hit upon a
stupid scheme - if the SS was looking for me, why would he need this scoundrel?
Would the SS be ashamed to come in and haul me down off my bed? But I had to
play along as if I believed him, because these crooks were perfectly capable of
informing on me.
Sure
enough, our next free Sunday came around and no sooner had I climbed into bed
when the scoundrel was there: "Nu! It's our free day!" Once again I tried to
calm him down: "What's the hurry? I just got here! I'm exhausted and worn
out... let me rest a bit, we have the whole day ahead of us. At noon I'll come
and find you and you can do whatever you want. Just leave me alone..." He went
away and I rested for a while. Then I went to find my brother in law who had
the earrings and my friend with the 100 dollars. I told them the whole story,
adding that I didn't believe more that one percent of the crooks' tale. I told
them that if the crooks show them bleeding flesh and say it's mine, they can
believe them, but if they tell them anything in my name, they shouldn't believe
a word of it! To make quite sure there were no slips, we arranged a secret
sign, so that if we were all interrogated we would have the same story, but in
different words, so nobody would suspect we had discussed it in advance. So we
prepared ourselves for even the worst eventuality...
At
about 1:00 p.m. the fellow returned. I launched into a long and involved story,
explaining that I'd been through the entire camp without finding my contact.
Perhaps he was in hospital, or he'd been sent to another camp. Perhaps he died!
I gave him a name and number, as well as the number of the block where he
should be found. (This information actually related to someone who had died the
previous day.) I ended by telling him that as far as I was concerned, he could
give the information to the SS, who would find him faster that we could. "That's the truth, and the best way of finding the man. If you still don't
believe me, my name's Shmuel Rubinstein, this is my number, I am in this block
and here's the number of my bed. But I should warn you that before they come
for me they'll beat the two of you as well. Possibly they'll hang all three of
us, but I have G-d Almighty on my side!" He stood there for a moment looking
totally confused, then he began to walk away, but at the door he turned back.
Once again I repeated my speech and eventually he left. At about 3:00 p.m. the
friend who loaned me 100 dollars came to see me with a tale: the scoundrel had
approached him with a tale of someone who wanted to buy 100 dollars worth of
cigarettes. He suggested that my friend get 100 dollars from me so we could all
profit. My friend told him that he didn't believe Rubinstein had anything to do
business with, but he'd ask anyway. He told me: "Shmuel, you really fooled him
- he's totally disappointed", then he returned to the crook and swore that I
have nothing. "Trust me", he assured the crook, "if Rubinstein had anything at
all to barter he would have told me about it." In the evening the crook
reappeared at my side. He confessed that it had all been a put-up job dreamed
up by Yankel. I just sat there and listened, and gradually he got to the point
- "Let bygones be bygones. Just give me 100 dollars and I'll bring you
cigarettes!" "Are you serious?" I replied, "I can't believe you're doing this.
Have you any idea what you've put me through? I really want to forget the whole
thing, so I'll give you the name of someone who can give you 100 dollars, but I
don't want to do any more business with either of you." I gave him the name of
someone I didn't know, but I had heard a story that this man was once a partner
of the two crooks. Together the three of them informed on a Jew to the SS and
the Jew was hanged as a result. When Leibel heard his name he said "He'll never
give me money". "Well, I don't know anyone else", I replied. And with that the
episode was closed...
Two
days later, we were returning to camp in the morning as usual. As a rule, as
soon as we passed the gate everyone dispersed to his own hut, but this day they
made us stand in orderly rows. We could already see that they'd brought stools,
and soldiers were standing poised with whips, which meant they were carrying
out a search. I always tried to be in the middle of the line, because you could
never tell which side the trouble was coming from! Whatever I once had that was
worth hiding was long gone... We were ordered to unlace our shoes and raise our
hands - apparently they were looking for rags taken from the blankets. It was
so cold that some people had torn strips from their blankets to wrap around their
feet. They had already discovered some and the beatings had begun! Whenever
there was trouble, it was sure to find me - I also had rags torn from old
blankets. I actually received them "legally" but go explain that to a soldier.
I tried unsuccessfully to remove the rags through various acrobatic
contortions. Meanwhile the murderers were getting closer, although I tried to
move further away. They were getting tired of the search, so they whistled for
the block leaders to take over. The leader of my block, who was Spanish, came
running directly opposite me. He understood that a search was being carried out
but had not yet realized what they were looking for. As I trotted past him with
my hands in the air he patted my body and let me keep going - and I fled! The
cries from the beatings arose to the heavens. Everyone had a whip fashioned
from a bull's penis, and each blow laid the flesh open. After 25 such blows you
might remain alive but you had to lie on your stomach for a month and it was
impossible to sit...
Soon
after we ended the night shift. The first day after that we were sent to clear
snow off the road. An SS standing next to me said: "We don't need gas chambers
here, people die without them" - and he was right. A new contingent of
prisoners arrived every two weeks and yet our numbers never increased, because
people died like flies from starvation, hard labor, filth and beatings...
Mainly from hunger! As the war drew to an end our hunger increased. A large
clay bowl of hot water in the morning, instead of tea, to be shared among ten
men who were suffering from colds. Each man received one swallow before passing
it on to the next, who watched carefully to make sure he didn't take two
swallows instead of one! The heat penetrated one's nostrils, and the resulting
vapor sometimes dripped from the nose directly into the bowl! More than one
unfortunate received a slap from the man at his side, who insisted on his
mouthful ... until the bowl was empty. At noon we received a liter of "soup"
which was nothing more than foul water. Anyone who discovered a few potato
peelings floating there was grateful for his "good meal". In the evening were
given a piece of bread, black as mud - no one had any idea what it was made
of... This was supposed to sustain us through 12 hours of hard labor,
accompanied by brutal beatings!
The
filth: Lice swarmed everywhere even the walls were infested. We slept two to
a bed on mattresses covered with dirty, damp rags. We lay on them to dry out
and try to warm our legs. Months without washing, without soap or towels, not
to mention a change of underwear - it was certainly not surprising that we were
lice-ridden. When someone died his naked body was wrapped in a blanket and
carried to the crematoria by two or three men. On the way, they would slice the
flesh off his buttocks, if anything remained there, and eat it. The blanket
would be returned for others to use. We ate coal, grass - whatever we could
find. Anything to assuage the hunger, even a little. To this day I don't
understand how people didn't simply go insane with hunger!... Our kapo was an
old Polish gentile, a real murderer. As he carried out an inspection one day he
noticed that some straw had landed on a middle bunk from the mattress above. He
noted down the number of the bed and continued on his way. That evening, when
everyone returned from work he called out the number and when the poor man
stepped forward he was ordered to bend over a stool. One man was instructed to
hold his head and his hands, while another man held his legs. The kapo then
administered 25 heavy blows with a thick cable, using all his strength.
Millions of lice didn't bother him, but a little bit of straw? How can such a
crime be pardoned? Is it any wonder that people died? Men would collapse on
their way to work - they would simply fall down and die. On the way back from
work we had to drag the bodies of the dead and dying with us to the camps. Once
I was carrying a dying man, together with 3 others. We had no stretcher so I
held his head from the rear while the others dragged him by his legs. An SS
murderer came up behind me carrying a log of wood, which he brought down three
times heavily on the man's head. The poor fellow didn't even groan. The
murderer then remarked: "You cursed idler, you can't even run - you need to be
dragged by others!" Go forth and seek justice among such people! Every evening
it fell to my lot to drag a dead or dying man, because I had broad shoulders,
and they needed "strong" people for this job. I soon realized I wouldn't last
much longer at this. My buddy Asher Sitko was very thin and looked really
pathetic, so I told him to pretend he couldn't walk and I would appear to be
supporting him. This saved me ...
The
camp stood on a hill. When we looked from the camp in the direction of the town
of Ebenezer it appeared as if the camp was in a valley. But when we went to
work we climbed uphill, and this was only the outskirts of a mountain. The
mountains were very high - we saw deer springing freely from rock to rock and
we envied them from the bottom of our hearts! The climate suited the cruelty of
the cursed Germans - when it rained it swiftly turned to snow, and every drop
was so cold on the skin that it hurt terribly.
They
took twelve of us to dig a ditch the earth was iron-hard. Those who managed
to get inside the ditch were luckier first of all, from a distance they
couldn't be seen. Secondly, it was impossible to measure their progress! I was
working with Asher, who was too weak to lift his spade. I began to pound the
rocks with all my might, telling Asher at least to move the pieces of rock
which I had succeeded in crushing. After a hour of hard work I managed to dig
down about half a meter. Our kapo was that same Ukrainian at whom I threw an
iron bar when we worked on the machines. He was going crazy with his club,
laying about him left and right, but as yet he hadn't touched me. While I was
struggling to dig, one of the civilians came by and watched how hard I was
working. Then he went away, returning a few minutes later with someone else who
appeared to be an engineer. I noticed that they two of them were talking about
me, so I redoubled my efforts. They went off and brought another man back with
them. Now all three were watching me, and soon they brought a fourth man as well.
I began to worry - who knew what they wanted of me? Each additional man
appeared to be more important than the previous one. Then the fourth man
approached me and asked if I was Jewish. When I said I was, he remarked "What a
shame you're a Jew. You work so well!" I replied boldly: "The fact that I'm a
Jew is not a shame at all. What really is a shame is that I'm so hungry". I
hoped that he would give me a piece of bread, but he just said "Yes, the
war..." After the kapo heard this, he didn't dare to lay a finger on me,
whether I worked or not!
Not
far from us I saw a group of Jews carrying a huge metal plate on their
shoulders while the SS and kapos beat them about their heads with clubs. It was
horrible to see. Suddenly we were called over. An SS indicated a pile of sand
topped by a huge crane such as was used to hoist bridges. It was extremely
heavy, tall and thin, standing on a relatively narrow base and weighing a few
hundred kilos. We were instructed to bring it down from the sand pile and move
it to another location. Clubs were already busily at work, people were
collapsing but the crane wasn't budging because there was nothing to grip or
hold onto. The blows were falling like rain, when suddenly I yelled out, either
from desperation or distress "Stop! I'll bring it down myself!" The murderer
really like the sound of this, so he ordered everyone to step aside and I was
told to get on with it. I instructed someone to hold it from the top to prevent
it from toppling over, knelt down, and using a thick piece of wood and a metal
bar I slowly shifted the crane. Gradually, slowly, without strenuous effort, I
brought the crane down off the sand pile and moved it into place. Nobody was
beaten, we returned to our work and our kapo didn't bother me any more.
One
day the soldiers were hugging and kissing each other, looking very pleased
about something. When I saw that, my heart dropped. We lived by signs - when
they were unhappy it was a sign that things were not going well for them at the
front, but when they celebrated it indicated a victory, and so on... I went to
find out what's going on, and overheard a conversation between two civilians -
Roosevelt, the American President, was dead! That calmed me down. Although it
was to soon to rejoice, under the new President the air raids were stepped up
and our hopes rose from day to day. It was crucial to hang on somehow.
Meanwhile we went back to working in the tunnels. We did all sorts of jobs,
none of them particularly difficult. On the way to work one day my buddy Asher
began to move strangely, as if he was dancing. This was a bad sign, because
people often "danced" that way just before they died. I grabbed his arm, rubbed
his face with snow and did my best to revive him. Our "meister" at work was a
civilian, an Italian gentile, a fine man, truly an angel. I told him what
happened to Asher and requested permission for him to rest. He agreed, warning
me not to let a soldier catch him. It was very cold in the tunnel due to the
icy cross-draught. I used some gas-operated military equipment to heat a metal
plate and placed Asher nearby to warm up until we went downstairs for our
midday meal. We stood in lines waiting for our soup, which was shared out by an
SS sergeant by means of a long handled ladle. If you weren't quick enough, he
brought down the ladle with the soup on your head and you had to "lick"
yourself, while the soup flowed together with your blood... Asher felt a little
better after drinking his soup, even though it was nothing more than foul
water. As we returned to camp in the evening I asked if he had anything hidden
away. He told me there were two cigarettes in the mattress. I was dumbfounded -
he had them hidden all this time without telling me? I asked whether he was
planning to bequeath them to somebody... then I sold them for a piece of bread,
telling him to eat his evening portion and keep the extra ration to eat in the
morning. Believe me, it is due to that extra bread ration that he remained alive.
Today he lives in America, but I have no contact with him. I wish him well!!
One
day when he was working somewhere else he received a blow in the face which
broke his jaw. In the evening when we returned from work he looked so bad that
I didn't recognize him. He told me what happened and went to the block doctor,
a Hungarian Jew, to ask for a bandage. The doctor demanded his bread ration in
exchange, which he handed over since he anyway couldn't eat. When he returned,
groaning, to bed, I asked why he wasn't eating and he told me that the doctor
had taken his portion. That made me very angry and I asked him whether it would
make a difference if he died because he had no bandage or because he had no
food. The next day he needed his bandage changed and I advised him not to take
his bread ration when he went to the doctor. If he was asked he should say he
hadn't received it yet, but promised to hand it over later... The doctor
changed his bandage in exchange for a promise of more bread and when Asher returned
to bed I told him to eat his portion slowly and leave the doctor to me. When
the doctor realized that his patient wasn't coming, he came over to the bed to
demand his "payment" but I got out bed, grabbed him by the throat with one hand
and raised my other hand, which held a wooden clog. "You dog", I told him, "you
spend the entire day sitting around the block at our expense, stealing our
food. When this poor fellow came to you for a bandage you took the bread for
which he slaved for 14 hours. You parasite - I'm going to kill you now!" He was
terrified and began to plead for his life. I let him go with a warning that if
he ever again refused to supply bandages without bread, he should just remember
what had just occurred. He caved in completely, and Asher received bandages
until his jaw healed.
My
brother in law Shmuel Chomsky was in another hut. He worked the night shift,
quarrying stones. At midnight he went to the latrines. There were always
informers, kapos, SS and various servants lying in ambush there, all of them
gentiles and murderers of Jews. He was caught and very severely beaten. I saw
him being carried into the camp and was horrified. I advised him to go to the
hospital but he didn't want to listen to me and the next night he again went
out to work. Once again he went to the latrines in the middle of the night and
the hooligans caught him and beat him again. This time he was brought straight
to hospital. I'll come back to this later.
Sometime
earlier I managed to get hold of an extra bread ration, I don't remember how! I
kept half for myself and divided the other half in two, giving one piece to my
brother in law Shmuel and the other to Asher. Asher said that one piece didn't
really make a difference, but if I could give him two pieces then after the war
he would repay me double! I didn't know whether to laugh or to cry - what sort
of offer was that? Right now we were all starving to death and food was
priceless, but here he was promising me that after the war, if we were lucky
enough to be liberated he would pay me double! Did he think he would have bread
while I would have none? Would I need his bread? In the meantime I succeeded in
selling the earrings, for which I received the promise of 75 kilos or loaves of
bread... To make a long story short, I eventually received 36 loaves and the
rest are still owing... I shared this bread with my brother in law Shmuel and
my sister's husband Benjamin. From time to time I also gave a piece to Asher...
People
continued dropping like flies. The ovens burned non-stop, endlessly
incinerating bodies. The war continued: on the one hand we had hope and the
desire to remain alive, but on the other hand time was against us, and the
angel of death lay in wait. A group of laborers returned from their work, not
far from Ebenezer, and reported that they had witnessed an air raid on the
train station which caused a great deal of damage. The station was totally
destroyed and the railway tracks were torn up. Instead of lying on the ground
they stood up in the air, looking as if they were praying to the heavens... The
train cars had burst apart - to prove it they showed us some sugar they had
stolen from the cars. What joy! What hope!!! That night I had a wonderful
dream: I was visiting Maltz and entered the home of Joseph Yaacov, who had
taught me to sew. In my dream his old father Moshe Getzel the scholar was there
as usual. A lectern stood near the stove and he was studying Gemara... They
were very happy to see me, they brought out a bottle of vodka and poured some
for me in a silver Kiddush cup. I held the glass and said "L'chaim. May our
eyes speedily behold the return to Zion" and the old man said "Amen" fervently
and with great emphasis. When I awoke my heart was pounding as if I was running
a race. I announced to everyone: "We will soon be liberated, and we're going to Eretz Israel", and we went to work. On the way I related the dream to everyone
I knew, because I had great faith in my dreams, which I felt were more like
prophesies than dreams! I also wanted to encourage those who were weak and
faltering. The hope and encouragement acted like a miracle drug!
Now I
must go back a bit to describe what happened to three Jews who I mentioned
earlier - I promised to get back to them... The first was the block servant in
the gypsy camp. He was one of the ugliest murderers I ever came across. The day
came when his "paradise" in the gypsy camp came to an end. He was sent to
another camp, where he fell into the hands of others who knew exactly how to
deal with him, and within a very short while he became a mussulman. Somebody
once said that the difference between fullness and hunger is six hours - after
six hours everyone is hungry! They sent him to the gas chambers, where he came
across some of his "friends" from before who had also experienced the strength
of his blows. He begged them not to hurt him, but to let him die in the gas
chambers with the others. They told him that they knew exactly how to deal with
him - this is what I was told - and they flung him alive into the oven...
The
second was Neumann, who was the block leader in Sventochlowicz. He ended up in
Mauthausen, where his reputation for cruelty preceded him. He was beaten so
hard that his head swelled up, after which they brought a bucket of water and
forced his head in until he drowned.
The
third was the Algerian Jew who worked with us on the night shift, transferring
heavy machinery from the trains to the tunnels. One Friday night they sent him
with another man to lift a "light" piece of equipment off a boxcar and carry it
to its designated place. Unfortunately the two of them were not careful enough the machine overturned and the poor man was killed on the very eve of
liberation. I was very sorry to see him die so needlessly. It upset me a great
deal. I had known him since we were together at Auschwitz and I knew how much
he'd been through.
Now I
want to return to my dream. That morning on our way to work I made a bet with
someone that we would be liberated within a fortnight. After that, he came to
taunt me every day, saying "Nu, where's our salvation?" I told him to have
patience and reminded him that the two weeks were not yet over. As they drew to
an end it became very clear that it was only a matter of a day or two or even a
few hours but it was very, very hard to be patient. And still he came to
tease me "Nu, where's your redemption?" I replied "Wait and see, it will be
much sooner than you expect ‘Yiden halt sich' Jews, hold on", I shouted at
the top of my voice, "Don't be disheartened - it's only a matter of hours
now..." The planes gave us no rest, day or night. It was the sweetest music I
had heard my entire life...
3.11
Liberation
Not more than two days later, on Friday, May 3, 1945,
as we went to work we saw in the distance thousands of people fleeing from the
town of Ebenezer, both on foot and by horse drawn wagon, carrying bundles on
their backs. We wanted to dance, the joy which flowed from our hearts warmed
our whole bodies, as we beheld this sight! If only we could have sung
"hallelujah" - but the SS still accompanied us. At the work site there were no meisters or civilian workers to be found. One after the other the planes came
swooping down almost on top of the buildings and then flew off again. Instead
of working we lay in the sun to warm ourselves and to enjoy the sight of the
new refugees... what sweet revenge! At the same time we spotted the SS running
around like drugged mice they had forgotten about us! The kapo called us to
push a boxcar but I impudently suggested he should call for some parasites like
himself let them work it out themselves, for a change! He cleared off, and we
lay there, exchanging tales with one another. Our hunger was forgotten as we
speculated on what would happen in these final hours. We guessed it was probably
noon or even later, but no bell had summoned us for lunch, although the food
distribution center was not far away. I suggested that we go back down to see
what's going on and why we weren't summoned for our meal. We came down to
discover everyone in line as usual, the soup urns standing in place as usual,
and the usual SS thief stood waiting with the ladle in his hand. Perhaps he was
waiting for us? Indeed, no sooner had we arrived that he began to make a
speech, addressing us as "people" and informing us that today or the following
day at the very latest, we would be free. As one man we all began to cheer, "Hurrah, Hurrah!" and he fell silent. When we were quiet he continued
"If you
behave well I'll share out the food", and kindly gave us our portions. Then we
lay around until the evening, when they returned us to the camp. When we
arrived at the block we were greeted with the announcement that there was no
more bread! The block leader who had administered such a frightful beating over
a bit of straw had vanished. Someone else came to inform us that the following
morning we could sleep till 8, we wouldn't be going out to work. We all burst
out singing and shouting for joy in all sorts of languages... Somebody reported
that our block leader had been found dead. Someone else described finding a kapo stabbed to death. Here a hut burst into flames, there something else
happened... I said to my friends "Guys, don't move from your places. Now
there's danger from another direction!" So we lay in our beds until morning but
none of us slept a wink! At 6:00 someone told us to come out to the assembly
yard. I was terrified, because I suspected that the murderers might decide to
kill us all at the last minute. I wanted to hide, but where? Frightened, but
with no alternative, we went out and stood in our usual places in the assembly
yard, where the Camp Kommandant (Lagen Fuhrer) awaited us, together with a
large number of SS.
When it was quiet the Lagen Fuhrer called for
translators, which was always the case when he had an important announcement to
make. There were people in the camp from at least twenty countries: Czech,
Russian, Polish, French, Italian, Spanish, Greek, Hungarian, Jewish and more...
The translators took their places alongside him and he began to speak in a vein
similar to the sergeant of the previous day: "People, today or tomorrow at the
latest you will be liberated by the Americans. Behave well so we won't have to
use force... If we are bombed we will move you to the shelters if you want".
Without waiting for the translation we all shouted at once "No, we don't want",
"We're not afraid", "Hurrah, Hurrah". The translators interpreted anyway. Later
we discovered that the murderers had booby-trapped one of the tunnels and hoped
to stage an air raid in order to get us into the tunnel and in this way to
finish us off!!
We received neither food nor water that day. The
SS vanished. They left old people to guard the perimeter of the camp, a kind of
armed Home Guard. We wandered around, hungry and thirsty. Our only satisfaction
was in seeing some of our former murderers a dead body here, someone dying
from blows there who had been sure that nobody apart from them would survive.
Now the day of judgement was at hand...
3.12
The Arrival of the Americans
This occurred
on Saturday. On Sunday we were still wandering around the camp, unable to
leave. At 3:00 in the afternoon an American tank appeared. It burst through the
gate, which buckled and collapsed. Everybody including me streamed out of the
camp. Near the gate was a hut - the murderers' lair. I went inside. A German
officer stood there. I opened a cupboard full of sheets, took one out and began
ripping it to shreds why? I have no idea! Perhaps I was thinking of bandages,
or perhaps it was simply a desire for revenge! The officer asked "What are you
doing, man?" In reply I kicked him in the backside, with all the anger and all
the strength left in me, screaming "Get out of here, you cursed dog!" Believe
me, he ran out of there much faster than I ever ran when they screamed at me...
I spotted an urn filled with hot coffee, and without pausing to think that it
may be poisoned, I poured myself a cupful and drank my fill. I looked for food
but didn't find any, so I entered another hut. A soldier was just coming out
carrying a filled knapsack and a pair of army boots. I snatched the boots away
and used them to hit him on the head. He fled like a dog, leaving me to regret
that I hadn't taken his knapsack as well. It was getting dark, but I still
managed to find a camera, which I took in the hope that I could trade it for
some bread. We had not eaten for three days... I returned to camp and hurried
to the hospital to see if Shmuel Chomsky was still alive. I stood at the fence,
calling his name, and he came to the window just as I did that other time. I
didn't recognize him, so I kept calling and shouting while he pointed to
himself! Finally I was convinced and told him to hold on, we would meet the
following day. Then I went to sleep. The next day I took a friend who still had
some of his strength left - I too still had my strength, although I don't know
where it came from. Together we left the camp. I'll go on with this later...
Now I
must go back, because I have remembered some important details. During one air
raid we took shelter in an unfinished tunnel where we sat with our feet in
water, while water dripped from the ceiling onto our heads. We were as hungry
as dogs, beaten and humiliated. I sat between two Poles who were not aware that
I was Jewish. They were discussing the Jews and decided that after the war they
would handcuff the last Jew, put him in a cage and drag him through the
streets, proclaiming that this was the leech who had drained their blood. At
such a time and under such conditions they had no greater concern that what
should be done with the last Jew! Nowadays we are told that some Poles were
"Righteous Gentiles". Well, I've never met one!
Two
days before liberation we were passing a hut, and what do you think we saw? It
was full of imprisoned Ukrainian SS. The Germans apparently believed that they
might betray them or flee, and for safety's sake they held them captive in a
hut inside the camp.
On
the Monday morning my new friend and I left the camp - it was our fourth day
without food. The first building we entered was a chemical laboratory. Five
seconds later it was impossible to tell what it had been. We destroyed it as
thoroughly as the Germans destroyed our synagogue. We searched for food, but
although we didn't find any we discovered a pocket watch which Henry or Daniel
later received as a gift. We also found chemist's scales. It was a shame to
destroy them so we took them with us and handed them over to an Austrian
gentile in exchange for half a loaf of bread, which we didn't eat. We searched
all manner of storehouses and tunnels - it's almost impossible to describe the
things we came across - electrical appliances and various utensils... We
finally arrived at a civilian labor camp which was totally deserted. In the
kitchen we found a mound of potatoes which we stuffed into a sack and dragged
over to a small hut. We opened the door (we had no need for keys!) to discover
that it had been the office of a Nazi contractor. We began to "organize" it,
throwing typewriters out of the window and smashing furniture. We came across a
stove, which came in handy - we lit it, found a tin bucket and went outside to
get some water. Nearby was a large wooden crate, secured with iron and with a
huge lock across the whole opening. Who knew what lay within? We spent 15
minutes on that crate, until it opened to reveal a dry piece of bread, a pair
of torn shoes, a metal bed and a large dry bone. That was all the treasure! We
also found some salt.
We
added the salt and the bone to the potatoes and cooked the whole lot together.
I ate one potato - no more, but I told my pal to eat as much as he wanted. He
ate a little. I suggested that I take some potatoes to the camp and exchange
them for margarine, so that we could fry potatoes that evening and have a
feast... We had decided not to return to the camp. We found beds, new
mattresses, sheets and clean blankets and we washed and changed our underwear.
He liked my suggestion about the margarine, not realizing that I was deceiving
him. So I took the bucketful of potatoes and made my way back to the camp. The
first person I saw was Yaacov Yungerman, who was also my brother in law. He
wanted to eat immediately, but I told him first to bring Shmuel Chomsky, my
brother in law Benjamin and my buddy Asher, because I couldn't walk around with
the potatoes - I could easily be killed for them! Within a very short while
they were all there. Shmuel Chomsky turned up as naked as the day he was born
and streaming with diarrhea like water from a tap. I brought blankets, spread
them on the ground and wrapped one around him. I presented them with the potato
bucket and gave Shmuel the bread because with his diarrhea he couldn't eat
potatoes. Half of one buttock was almost gangrenous from the beating he had
received that night. I sent him back to the hospital and took my buddy Asher Sitko back with me to the hut where I washed him, dressed him in clean
underwear and put him to sleep in a clean bed. I warned him not to tell my new
friend what had become of the potatoes... Instead I explained that when I
entered the camp I was set upon by some Russians who stole the pail of
potatoes, but I consoled him with the thought that we really had plenty - all
that was necessary was to go to the kitchen and bring some more. He accepted my
story with great understanding...
Another
day had passed, and the Americans were also not forthcoming when it came to
providing food. We cooked some more potatoes in the evening, ate them and went
to sleep without fear of the servants, the block leaders and the rest of the thieving
crew. I slept the sleep of the just. The next morning we began planning what to
do next and how to organize the food. Meanwhile we ate potatoes for breakfast.
At lunchtime I took the bucket and went off to the camp to see if anything was
happening there. The Americans had cooked soup and were sharing it out. A huge
line waited in front of each vat of soup. Total confusion reigned! I noticed
that the lines were organized according to nationality: Spanish, Italian and so
on. I joined the line of Italians - my coloring was similar to theirs and they
accepted me without question. I stood there until I realized that I would never
get anywhere if I stayed with them, such a useless lot didn't suit me! I
wandered over to the Poles but soon saw that nothing good would ever come from
them either because their line seemed endless. I attached myself to the
Russians, who took charge of their line properly. Soldiers fired in the air
from time to time to maintain order but it didn't make any noticeable
difference. Within a short time I received really good soup, the way it ought
to be. I ran with it all the way back to my hut, a distance of 2 kilometers,
and we all ate it with great rejoicing...
In
the meantime my new pal, whose name was Leibel, went off and found three new
friends of his own - Polish gentiles. He brought them into the other half of
the hut. I was somewhat annoyed but didn't say anything - it was very hard to
judge others because everything was so illogical that each person was driven by
his inner urges. The hunger and the drive to eat, the striving to be free, to
adjust to freedom, to forget all the oppression - all this drove people to act
without thinking. We had lived for so many years beyond the law that it was
difficult to accept any rules. Everyone was utilizing this time to restore
their health, fill their empty bellies and avenge themselves to some degree.
I
took a shortcut through the forest to a different camp because I had been told
that everything had been transferred there, including our kitchen, and I also
wanted to see my brothers in law and my friends. On the way I ran into a group
of thieves, dozens of SS, lying armed in the forest. I was sure they were
waiting in ambush, like wolves or dogs, and I was unarmed - I didn't even have a
stick to defend myself with. I would dearly have like to tell them a few words,
using phrases from their own lexicon, but I dared not. It was enough that I
could pass by without fear. They probably had not yet managed to surrender, or
perhaps they had other plans. At any event, dangers still lurked everywhere...
I
returned after visiting my friends. I had seen them all except Mendel
Yungerman, my best friend from my hometown. He had died on Saturday, the day we
were notified that we would be liberated. May his memory be a blessing. He was
a simple, honest man, always prepared to help others without thought of reward.
His wife and three children perished in Auschwitz. When I heard the news I
returned to my hut, terribly despondent. I had hoped so much that he would
remain alive and we could continue together... but fate let me down. It was
even more upsetting that he died on the very last day!
Upon
returning to the hut I suggested to the guys that we look for a more
comfortable place to live. About 700-800 meters along the road leading to the
old camp we came across a large, vacant wooden house, with beds, mattresses and
a few sticks of furniture. We had no need for permission - once we decided, we
walked right in. This building also had been divided into two partitions, so we
took one half and the three Poles the other. We had no choice but to befriend
them.
At
midday I noticed one of them whispering to the other two. They all tiptoed out
and ran towards the forest. I guessed that they were "hunting" so I followed
them stealthily. We were very close to the concentration camp, right next to
the road we climbed every day to work, returning with our dead comrades... and
there in the forest were the houses of the loyal Nazis who had fled in fear of
the liberation and the "bandits". I watched the Poles approach one of these
houses. They peered in all directions to make sure nobody was watching, broke a
window and scrambled inside, with me hot on their heels. They explored
downstairs while I made for the attic. I overturned a chest of clothes and went
through all the pockets but couldn't find anything small and valuable so I
threw the lot away. Downstairs in the salon I saw some fine crystal and glass
objects and, remembering how a German sergeant and another soldier destroyed
everything in the small synagogue in Maltz, I overturned the cabinet, smashing
the beautiful crystal... I snatched up a down quilt, ripped it and shook the
feathers into the air, telling them to fly, just as ours were sent flying... To
this day I regret not setting fire to that house.... For myself I took only an
alarm clock. Meanwhile two girls returned to the house and with breathtaking
audacity, demanded to know who was responsible for the damage. Within a short
time they became friendly with the Poles and they all proceeded to make merry
together. The Poles gave them food and in return they gave what they had to
offer... I was resting on the bed when they opened the door and looked in. One
said to the other: "That's our clock". I snatched up a shoe and hurled it at
them as hard as I could. The shoe hit the lintel and they fled.
We
settled into our new quarters very comfortably. Leibel was an expert thief, he
enjoyed stealing just for the fun of it! Asher was a "schnorrer" willing to beg
for handouts, but I couldn't stand it. Leibel went out with the gentiles. They
would travel by train to outlying villages, where they stole at gunpoint. If
the villagers made a fuss it was enough to point a gun in a window - the
homeowners would turn out the light and dive under their beds, while the guys
emptied out a goat shed or a storeroom. They would bring back 10 chickens or a
sheep, a bucketful of eggs, a pot of butter, cheese, whatever they could lay
their hands on. Sometimes it would take 2 days before they returned. In the
meantime I went to town for the first time. I visited Gemunden, which is a fine
city on the banks of the river Fentessty, because I heard that ration cards
were being issued there and I hope to find something to trade as well. The duty
clerk asked for my address - did I have any documents? My documents were with
that dog Hitler!!! The clerk saw by my face that it would be far better to hand
over the ration card without asking any more questions! The rest of the guys
came in, and together we prepared fictitious addresses, with street names and
numbers. When asked to produce documents I said I only had a number, and I read
it to her off my tin number-tag. In this way I managed to get another ration
card. The only thing lacking was the voucher for cigarettes, which she tore off
because there were no cigarettes to be had. As we came out I told the guys to
think up new identities and go back again. They made a few changes to their
appearance and once again they were issued ration cards. I decided that it
would be risky to go back a third time, but as if I was "newly born" I went in
anyway and requested a food ration. The clerk recognized me and said "I think
you've already been here". I replied "Perhaps you think so, or maybe somebody
was here who resembles me, but I arrived just this second". "Where do you
live?" I gave a street name and number, and when she asked for documents, I
said "Where would I find documents, Ma'am? I only have a number." She thought
she would catch me out with this, but I gave her my number from Auschwitz, and
when she searched her files it did not appear, which proved that I had not yet
applied for a ration card...
We
found a boat and went for a sail. We were looking for bread, and found very
good bread at a very cheap price, together with some butter and cheese. Money
was no problem, Sitko had plenty - he was a born beggar. I couldn't bear what
he did. I was prepared to enter a shop, collect all the items I wanted and then
declare "I have no money. I worked for you and now you owe me and the time has
come to pay up". But I couldn't beg!
We
returned to Ebenezer and I went to town for the items available on our ration
cards. We had heard a rumor that cigarette vouchers were available from the
City Council. I approached the clerk, presented four cards and requested
cigarette vouchers, which she gave me on the spot. When I came out, I gave my
cards to Sitko and told him to add them to his and present them all together.
He did so, and received cigarette vouchers for all of them. In went the others,
everyone taking the same cards and just changing the numbers. When they had all
been in, I took off my coat and hat, switched my number and went back inside.
By this time she was demanding identification, because something appeared not
quite right. I told her that my documents were with the Fuhrer, Hitler the dog,
who only left me with a number. "So give me the number". I gave her the number
on my tin tag - the one on my arm I kept for later! Once I had my voucher, all
the other guys followed my example - they were excellent pupils with a high IQ
and they caught on very fast! When everyone had their vouchers, I said "Listen
guys, I'm going to take a chance - I'm going back in!" A quick change to my
appearance, a different number, and in I went. She said: "I think you've
already been here". "You're dreaming, Ma'am, perhaps someone else who resembles
me... Please Miss, don't make fun of me, don't tease me, I don't have the
nerves for it. Haven't I suffered enough already?" She handed over the vouchers
without daring to raise her eyes. When she asked for my number I gave her the
number from Auschwitz. When I came out I told the guys "That's enough for now.
We'll play the game again tomorrow but we can't go on with it any more for the
time being." We found a tobacco shop with a long, orderly line stretching
outside. When the five of us marched in and slammed our vouchers onto the
counter, the saleswoman nearly fainted. We took nearly every cigarette in the
place but everyone was afraid to utter a word, except one man who said "What's
this? How dare you walk in without waiting in line and take all the cigarettes?"
"Shut up, schweinhund", I snarled at him, "You've eaten and drunk
our blood long enough". Not a soul made a sound as we walked out. Soon we came
to a large mansion in a garden filled with trees and flowers, obviously not the
home of poor or simple people! I walked straight up to the mansion, with Sitko
right behind me. Through the windows they watched us approach, and we were met
at the door by an elderly, aristocratic woman bearing a cup of hot water.
"Would you care for some soup?" she inquired. I was furious. How dare she offer
us hot water and call it soup? Without thinking I hurled the water into her
face, and she rushed into the house, howling like a scalded bitch. The nerve of
the old witch!!! If she had invited us in, offered us food or even talked to
us, I would not have done it...
We
continued on our way, the whole group of us, looking for eggs. We found a small
shop dealing only in eggs. The elderly saleswoman was horrified when we cleaned
out her entire stock but we had another problem - how would we carry them? An
American field kitchen had been set up opposite, and I spotted some large cans
of preserves nearby, which we collected, filled with eggs and dragged home. We
ate as much as we possibly could, and when Shmuel Chomsky turned up, I gave him
some as well. My pal Sitko told our new friend Leibel that I was distributing
some of "our" food to my brother in law. When I heard that I thought I would go
out of my mind - "You swine of a human being - your meanness is beyond belief!
I carried you on my aching shoulders, I shared my last piece of bread with you
in times of hunger and pain, and you promised to repay me after the war was
over... I abandoned my brothers in law in order to take you with me, I washed
you, cleaned you up, fed you with everything of the best, and now you complain
because I have given my brother in law some food!!!" I should have slapped him hard
a few times and thrown him out to fend for himself, but I didn't, and he
remained with us. Meanwhile Leibel continued with his "hobby" while I became
the cook. I must say that I became an excellent cook!
Leibel
brought home a bicycle and the two of us used it to ride around, but Sitko
didn't know how to ride a bike. Once or twice I joined the men who traveled to
other villages by train. In Austrian villages the houses are not close together
- there was quite a distance between them and each house was surrounded by
extensive lands which included cowsheds, barns, goat sheds and chicken coops.
There was usually also a dog. We came to one house and knocked on the door, but
nobody answered. The door was finally opened by a large gentile with a
mustache, who tried hurriedly to close it when he saw us, but I swiftly put my
foot in the crack. He asked what we wanted and I told him to bring us food. He
gave me a piece of bread but I threw it back in his face: "This is all you have
for a hungry group of people? Are you looking for trouble?" I held the door
open to remind him that if he tried anything, not only would he lose the door,
but other things as well. This time he brought half a large loaf of bread with
a nice-size chunk of meat, which I took with the remark "You're lucky this
time!"
I
didn't spend much time in the villages. Once I was on a train with a number of
laborers returning from work in forced labor camps. They left the train at
various stops and eventually I was left alone in the carriage. I noticed that
someone had left a bulging knapsack, so when I got off the train I took it with
me and opened it behind a building. It was stuffed with rags and builder's
tools - there was nothing in it for me! What I looked for were clothes. As I
passed by an Austrian house I noticed a pair of trousers, which I took. They
were too short to be worn as long pants and too long for short pants, but when
I cut them down with a knife they made a fine pair of shorts. We had plenty of
food at the time, but clothes were in short supply... We were living very
comfortably in our hut. Our buddy Leibel spent two days every week travelling
around to bring us meat, eggs and enough supplies for the whole week. I was in
charge of the ration cards and everything else. Meanwhile my friend Asher came
back to us and began behaving like a decent human being.
Our
official kitchen was quite a distance away, about 7 kilometers travel by road
or 4 kilometers through the woods. Either I or Leibel, when he was around,
would go by bike to bring food for the three of us. One Shabbat I woke up to
discover that neither Leibel not Asher was anywhere to be seen... I looked for
our utensils, because I intended to collect our food, but they were nowhere to
be found either. This was a real puzzle. What was going on? Why would Asher
Sitko go all that way to bring our food when I could go so much faster by bike?
Something was going on and I couldn't figure out what it was. When Asher came
back with the food I asked why he bothered when we had the bicycle. Feigning
innocence he replied "I couldn't sleep, and you were sleeping so soundly that I
decided to go on my own". Very nice indeed, a true gentleman! Then he asked
whether I had taken 200 American cigarettes from him. "Where did you get 200
cigarettes?" I asked. "An American soldier gave them to me". I was very upset "If you had 200 cigarettes, why didn't you give them to Leibel? He's the only
one who smokes. He endangers his life by traveling two days every week to bring
us food. You parasite, all you do is sit at home and eat the best of everything
and this is how you thank him for everything he's done for you? I'm almost
certain that he took the cigarettes, but don't you dare say a word to him!" In
the meantime I began to check out the matter...
By Sunday afternoon Leibel had not yet returned
and my pal Sitko had vanished once again. I rode to the camp but my friends
weren't there either. When Shmuel Chomsky saw me he asked "What's going on
between the three of you? Asher Sitko told me that you said I should give him
the 200 American cigarettes. I told him I hadn't seen you and you hadn't
mentioned anything about cigarettes". Asher realized that he was cooking a
porridge which he could neither swallow nor expel, so he returned to Shmuel and
asked him not to say a word to me and pretend that nothing had happened. But of
course something had happened. I was furious. Returning to the hut, I began to
carry out a thorough search starting with Leibel's mattress, where I discovered
the cigarettes, still in their wrapping, together with my camera and a dozen
leather soles I had found - I hadn't even noticed they were missing. Asher
returned with food as if nothing had happened and I asked casually why he had
gone out today. He replied simply that he couldn't sleep. "Is this all about
the cigarettes?" I asked and he didn't reply. Then I burst out "You
good-for-nothing villain, is this how you repay me for all I've done for you? I
even abandoned my brother in law to save you. And yet you've been checking on
me to see whether I stole your cigarettes. This is your promise to repay me
double for sharing my last piece of bread with you?" (My poor brother in law
Benjamin had meanwhile died in hospital in Ebenezer I only found out two weeks
later when his name appeared in a bulletin). I grabbed him by the throat and
was quite prepared to throttle him. "You scoundrel", I screamed at him, "I
should break your bones right now and throw your carcass away like a dog for
those cigarettes, and for telling Leibel that I was giving food to my brother
in law - was I stealing food from you?" But I didn't do it and he remained with
us until the end... Then I showed him Leibel's mattress. I took the camera and
the leather soles but warned him not to touch the cigarettes.
Leibel
returned. I didn't tell him the whole story, I just said "Look, Leibel, if you
knew the miserable so-and-so had cigarettes, why didn't you simply ask him to
give you some? Why did you take them by yourself and hide them? They don't
belong to you any more than they belong to him. You endanger your life,
spending two days a week wandering the roads, while he sits and eats everything
we prepare. Now he gets hold of 200 cigarettes and he puts on such a
performance"... Asher remained but very little love was lost between us! As the
saying goes, he paid for bread with stones. It is said of Rabbi Sonnenfeld that
whenever he did someone a favor he gave him a small stone, explaining "Since I
did you a favor you're sure to throw a stone at me, and I wanted to make sure
that the stone is a small one..."
After
we had been there for 6 weeks we heard that Israeli soldiers had arrived with a
vehicle covered all over with Stars of David. When I heard that I almost went
crazy - why did I not merit to see this glorious sight? When I checked out the
story it appeared that nobody had actually seen it, but everyone could describe
it in detail. That's how the story spread, like the tale of Elijah the Prophet
- nobody has ever seen him, but there are no end of stories about him... But it
lit a spark inside me and without another thought I took the next train out of
there. All I had in the world were a pair of army shoes, short pants stolen off
a washing-line, no shirt, the coat of a German soldier, no hat, a knapsack with
a bit of food, a dozen leather soles and a camera. I didn't even stop to think.
When I look back today it makes me laugh - there was so much wealth lying
around, just waiting to be picked up, if I hadn't been in such a hurry I could
have taken plenty with me. On the other hand, to this day I don't regret it.
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