HOLOCAUST
SURVIVORS'
NETWORK
< iSurvived.org >
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CONCENTRATION
CAMP
DICTIONARY
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By
OLIVER
LUSTIG
Birkenau-Auschwitz
and Dachau Holocaust Survivor
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Jude
(Jew)
Judenstern
(1)
Judenstern
(2)
Judenstern
(3)
Judentransport
(Transport of Jews)
Judenverfolgung
[The Persecutions of the Jews
(1)]
Judenverfolgung
[The Persecutions of the Jews
(2)]
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Jude
The Nazi concentration camp were
crammed with:
Thousands, tens of Thousands of
"asocial elements" -- tramps, poachers, beggars, rogues,
babblers, pimps, prostitutes. They wore a black triangle
on the chest as a dist6inctive sign. The homosexuals wore
as pink triangle.
Thousand, tens of thousands of
law-breakers -- thieves, highwaymen, swindlers, murderess
and professional killers. They wore a green
triangle.
Thousands, tens of thousands of
political detainee. They wore a red triangle. The
clergymen wore a violet triangle.
Millions of Juden,
of Jews. They wore a yellow triangle.
All detainees -- thousands and
hundreds of hundreds of thousands of them &emdash; who
wore black, pink, green, red triangles has been interned
in camps on the ground of a real, invented, presumed or
suspected charge. They were accused or suspected of
having done something wrong.
The millions of detainees
wearing the yellow triangle were not accused of anything,
They were not suspected of having committed a crime
against someone else. Not were they suspected of doing it
in the future. They were being interned in
Vernichtungslagern1 because they
were Juden, Jews.
Because they had been
born.
And because they were still
alive.
In Europe there were 11,000,000
Jews. But for the ensuing one thousand years on the old
continent, turned into Nazi
Lebensraum2, there was not place for
any Jude. For any Jew at all.
1 Camps
for mass extermination.
2
Living
space.
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Judenstern
(1)
Der
Judenstern, the yellow star with six pointed
rays, was invented by the Nazis as a sign of public
stigmatization, of outlawing a whole people. As a matter
of fact, by the time the compulsory wearing of the
Juderstern was decided, the Jews in the
Reich had already been stigmatized,
outlawed, isolated.
Starting 1933, anti-Jewish
measures proliferated in geometrical progression with
every passing year. The Jews were persecuted, removed
from all activities, banished from all friends. They had
been taken everything and had been forbidden everything.
The Nazis, however, were not satisfied. It seemed to them
that, although banished from the economic and social
life, the Jews had not been humiliated enough. They would
have liked that each Arian of pure blood be able to
single out the Jews and enjoy at their sufferings and
humiliation. Consequently, in July 1935, the Jews were
bound to show that they were Jews -- whether asked to or
not -- whenever they came in direct contact with the
authorities. Thus, upon entering an institution, a Jew
who wished to address someone, no matter what he wanted,
had the obligation to begin by saying: "Ich bin
Jude", "I am a Jew."
A few months later a further
measure was taken to the same effect. All Jews,
irrespective of their name, were compelled to adopt an
extra first name (the man -- Israel; the women -- Sarah)
which they had to mention when introducing themselves,
and even in writing.
Then the amalgamation of Jewish
families in "Jewish houses" followed. On September 1,
1939 preparation began, under the direction of Heidrich,
for the delimitation of the ghettoes.
And so, when the star with six
pointed rays made of yellow cloth, applied against a
black background and bearing the inscription
Jude, Jew, was introduced throughout the
Reich it no longer signified
stigmatization, out lapwing and isolation -- they were
already by-gone things -- but served as a
passport for the gas chambers in the
East.
A few weeks later long trains
full of deportees were running towards Maidanek,
Treblinka, Birkenau-Auschwitz.
In front of the crematoria at
Birkenau, the deportees were asked neither
their name, nor the country they were coming from. On
seeing the Judenstern, the yellow star on
the chest, back or right arm of the deportees, the
SS-men hurried to push them into the gas
chambers as quickly as possible.
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Judenstern
(2)
On March 28, 1944, in the
evening, when I heard the newspaper vendor shouting in
the streets of Cluj, occupied by Horthysts, "Special
edition... Special... The final settlement of the Jewish
question... Tomorrow the Council of Ministers will debate
upon the ordinances regarding the radical settlement of
the Jewish question... Special edition... Special", I was
not scared.
Nor did I panic when I read the
following announcement printed in huge letters on the
front page of the newspapers: "Staring tomorrow, Jews are
compelled to wear a 10 x 10 cm yellow star with six
pointed rays on the left side of their chest." It was on
the night of April 4 to 5, when everybody in the house
began to sew the Judenstern, the yellow
star with six pointed rays, in their clothes that I was
seized with fear.
The next morning, when I went
out in the street and saw that everybody was gazing at me
I felt as if my blood had been all of a sudden drained
out of me, that I had lost my strength. I leaned against
the wall lest I should fall.
Since childhood I had reconciled
myself to the thought that I did not have the same rights
with people of my age, that I had to follow my way
receive blows I did not deserve. But I stifled my grief
and hid it from other people, and when I went out in the
street I was like everybody else. Now, however, everyone
was pointing his finger at me, humiliating me with his
prying eyes. And I could not keep my grief, hidden in the
deepest corner of my hart, from being defiled.
Someone who has not gone through
that ordeal might wonder why we had not defied those
around us, for it was the Horthysts that deserved all
contempt. The answer is simple. If I alone, out of the
whole town, had been compelled to wear the yellow star, I
should have done it my head up, defying everybody. As it
was, when all your folk, parents and brothers, and all
people of your and their age, from children to a
grandfather who could hardly walk, had to wear the mark
of humiliation and disdain you simply lacked that moral
support enabling you to behave like a hero.
When you go out in the street
with the mark of shame on your chest, in that street that
saw you spending your childhood, going to school or
embracing a young girl under the chestnut trees for the
first time in your life, when you go out in that street
with the Judenstern, the yellow star, on
your chest for the first time you may fall
dead to the ground quicker than if mown down by
machine-gun fire.
I did not die, bur something
inside me broke for good and all. The burn of the yellow
star is incurable, its wound never heals up.
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Judenstern
(3)
One July night in the summer of
1944 I squeezed out of barrack No. 21 in camp
E and looked through the interval between
the barracks at the neighboring camp, D, to
the road that crossed Birkenau, which,
while separating camps D and C,
linked the selection platform to crematoria III
and IV. In the dark -- the moonlight could not penetrate
the violet-black smoke layer above the camp -- I could
only see the road swept from either side by the rays of
the searchlights in the watchtowers. A long column of
people selected for the gas chambers right after their
arrival was dragging along the road. I knew there were
mothers and children, old and sick people, but I could
not make out their faces. Nor the outline of their
bodies. Only the Judensterne, the yellow
stars with six pointed rays, on the chest or arms of
those in that long column dragging along towards
crematoria III or IV twinkled in the searchlight
rays.
It was three months since,
one night, I had been compelled to sew the
Judenstern, the yellow star, on my clothes,
since something had broken inside my heart for good and
all.
Yes, exactly three mounts after
that July night, and all the nights that followed in the
cursed summer of 1944, looking from behind barrack No. 21
at the road separating camps D and
C, and obsessed with the fantastic
twinkling of the Judensterne, the yellow
stars, on the chests or arms of those dragging along
towards the crematoria, I had the feeling that something
had broken in the gigantic mechanism of the universe, and
the stars were ceaselessly falling down, along the road
cutting the camp into two, into the huge catacombs in the
basement of the crematoria, where, in contact with
Cyclon B, they suddenly
stopped rolling, ceasing to twinkle for ever.
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Judentransport
In the thirties, the detainees
were carried to the concentration camps in black or gray
vans, escorted by Gestapo men. Later on,
when the vans proved insufficient to cope with that tack,
the detainees were transported by the last carriage of
trains.
In early 1943, after the new
crematoria and modern gas cambers of
Birkenau-Auschwitz were put into operation,
the Gestapo passed on the organization of
the so-called Judentransporte, transport of
Jews, special trains of 50 wagons each, 70-80 persons and
all their belongings begin crowded in each and every
wagon.
"The moment we feel that the
carriage jerks -- Magda Simon, the survivor of the ghetto
in Oradea would recall -- a white- bearded old man begin
to say the age-old prayer: El mole
rachamim..."
"A moan of devastating grief
suddenly raises from the crowd. Bent over one another and
hitting their chests with their fists, the people burst
out into a heart-rending cry as if they were burning
themselves."
"... We are travelling for
barely a few hours, and the varnish of civilization, so
to say, is already gone. Because of the unbearable heat
and the suffocating lack of air we are little by little
taking off our clothes. With just their petticoats on,
women are not embarrassed to huddle against men. We blush
and hesitate to relieve nature in a bucket placed in a
corner of the carriage for the purpose. At the beginning
an overcoat or another garment is held suspended in the
air to screen the person sitting on the bucket, but with
our strength and patience fading away, nobody cares about
it any more."
"... A woman screams with pain
and puts her hand upon her heart. The people around her
are jumping back in horror. The woman is staggering and
about to collapse but she is caught and supported before
falling to the ground. A doctor feels her pulse with is
no longer beating."
Such a Judentransport,
transport of Jews, the fifth one which on June 6,
1944 set out from the town of Cluj, occupied by Horthysts
at that time, was to carry me, my parents, my brothers
and sisters away, in its last but one wagon, together
with other seventy people and their belongings. Because
of the pell-mell of people, trunks, backpacks, and all
those heaps on heaps of rags it was impossible to move.
One no longer knew which ballot belonged to whom. The
children were crying. One was sick, another one thirsty,
a third wanted by all means to go out and play. How could
he understand that playing was over for him
forever?
The air had become undreathable.
People ware relieving nature in buckets, which could not
be emptied. Not even the corpses could be taken out of
the wagons, because the doors were locked. The heat
intensified the stink. Mothers were screaming for air,
for fear their children should get suffocated. On the
third day, there was no longer even a drop of water and
food was running out, too. The old prayed and cursed, the
children were crying. Urges to calmness and hope came up
against dismayed, hysterical shouts and the train rolled
on without stop, continuing its mad journey through the
fascist night.
On the fourth day, the train
that had stealthily crossed the cities of Hungary, the
villages of Czechoslovakia, the forests of Poland finally
came to a halt. The long shrill, sinister whistle of the
engine gave us a start. We crowded towards the door of
the van, happy that finally we arrived at our destination
but at the same time filled with sinister foreboding. We
looked out through the slits in the door and wagon walls
and shuddered. All we saw was barbed-wire fences,
barracks and watch towers with armed SS-men
about to pull the trigger. Among the barracks we saw
thousands, tens of thousands people, all dressed in
streaked clothes. Black, stifling smoke was ominously
rising above in huge black, gray wreaths.
We had arrived at
Birkenau-Auschwitz. It was on June 9, 1944,
around 11.00 o'clock.
Those were our last moments
together, bothers and sisters, parents and
children...
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Judenverfolgung
(1)
Die Judenverfolgung,
the persecutions of the Jews in the Nazi
Reich started in March 1933 with
S.A.-men blocking the entrances to the
Jewish owned shops and stores, and ended, after several
years, with opening the doors of the
Birkenau-Auschwitz gas chambers to the
endless columns of Jews deported from all over Hitlerism
overrun Europe.
From March 1933, year after
year, month after month, week after week and, in certain
periods, day after day, the newspaper announced new
measures, which amplified and generalized die
Judenverfolgung, the persecution of the
Jews.
The blocking of the entrances to
the Jewish shops and stores was successively followed by
their compulsory boycotting from 10.00 a.m. till evening,
by the interdiction for the Jews to run retail and
wholesale stores, domestic industries, trade firms,
agricultural enterprises, as well as to sell in markets,
fairs and exhibitions... by the closing of all Jewish
enterprises, and their Aryanizing.
The exclusion of Jews from the
other fields of activity started with the cancellation of
all labor contracts of the Jewish physicians in the
Berlin hospitals. It was followed by: the forced
dismissing of judges and public prosecutors, the
withdrawal of the right to hold any public office, the
forced resignation of all Jewish physicians from the
Reich's hospitals, the non-recognition of
their certificates, the disbarring of Jewish lawyers, the
abrogation of all exceptions initially granted to some
Jews on the ground that their fathers or sons had fought
and died on the front in the First Would war. Then, the
Jews were excluded from guard duties, from the
information bureau, from land trading and house
management and from peddling.
Referring to the numerous
anti-Jewish laws, decrees and orders, Göbbels
turgidly states to the international press: "The legal
regulation is the most loyal and human method." By virtue
of this loyalty and humanness, the Jews of the
Reich were successively forbidden: to go to
spas, beaches, rivers, lakes... to go to theatres,
cinematography, concerts, exhibitions...then also to
reading-rooms, libraries, museums, sports grounds,
open-air swimming... to use sleeping-cars and
restaurant-cars.
Again under the auspices of Nazi
loyalty and humanness the Jewish and democratic
literature was proscribed. The works of August Bebel,
Karl Liebknecht and Karl Marx, of Lion Feuchtwanger, Egon
Erwin Kisch, Thomas Mass and Erich Maria Remarque were
consumed by flames in town squares.
All over the Reich,
on buildings, in shop windows, at the entrance
into localities, in parks, on benches, on the doors of
public houses, in the streets, plates and posters bearing
the inscriptions "Forbidden to the Jews: or "For Aryans
only" were getting more and more numerous. In August
1936, as if by charm, they disappeared from Berlin, but
only during the Olympic Games. Immediately after that
they reappeared with an even more obsessive
frequency.
Göbbels had the incredible
cynicism to refer to loyalty and humanness when, in the
Reich, only 1.5 per cent of the young Jews
had the right to attend schools, being however forbidden
to take part, after classes, in fetes, excursions,
performances or sports games organized by the respective
schools, and subsequently, all, without excerption, were
expelled from any educational from; when the Jews'
diplomas in medicine. Law and pharmacy were declared
null; when marriages between Jews and German citizens
were forbidden, the Jew born on the banks of the Rhine
from time immemorial being not considered
Reischsbürger, citizen of the
Reich.
With the same cynicism and
impudence, Hitler stated: "The Nürnberg laws are not
anti-Jewish, but pro-German ones." In the opinion of the
Führer, the laws adopted on September
15, 1935, at Nürnberg, according to which the Jews
were outlawed and deprived of any right, had nothing
anti-Jewish in them. After they were gradually excluded
from all domains, after they were forbidden to practice
any profession, decrees and orders started appearing
whereby the Jews were compelled to surrender all their
possessions. First, all gold, silver and platinum
objects, all precious stones and pearls... then the cars
and motorcycles... after that the radio sets...
then...
When all was forbidden to them
and everything was taken from them, when they had nothing
else to surrender but their life, die
Judenverfolgung, the persecution of Jews, passed
into a mew stage, called "Die Endlösung der
Judenfrage", the "final solutions of the Jewish
question" or, in plain English, the total extermination
of Jews from Europe.
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Judenverfolgung
(2)
During the first stage of
Judenverfolgung, as shown during the trial
in Nürnberg, "The Jews were forcibly interned in
ghettoes and compelled to do convicts' work; they were
denied the possibility to practice their professions;
their properties were expropriated and they were
forbidden any cultural life, the access to the press, to
theatres and schools. The SD had the task
to keep them under surveillance, a sinister tutelage,
indeed". Concomitantly, all propaganda channels were used
to denigrate the Jews, to arouse hatred against them and
incite the masses to pogroms, while the police had been
issued written orders" not to interfere in the event of
possible actions taken by the population against Jews."
The same order stipulated: "The foremost major goal of
the German steps should be the isolation of the Jews from
the rest of the population. This implies first the
registering of the rest of the population. This implies
the registering of the Jews with a view to removing them,
and other similar measures. These will be immediately
followed by the obligation to wear a distinctive mark,
the Jewish yellow star, and by their deprivation of any
freedom. They will be moved into ghettoes, where men will
be separated from women. All Jewish proprieties should be
confiscated, except for those things that are strictly
necessary to live a miserable life.
With the overrunning of new
territories, the Nazi expanded the
Judenverfolgung, the persecution of the
Jews, to the whole Europe. The persecution methods
already tested were applied with increase brutality in
the territories freshly included in the Reich,
and also in the occupied territories or in those
under the influence of Berlin.
At Nürnberg a report drawn
up by Brigadebführer Dr. Staleker and
sent to Himmler in 1942 was presented, in which the
former showed: "The anti-Semite forces were incited to
pogroms against the Jews already during the first hours
after the occupation of the territories, although this
proved to be a very difficult thing.
"In pursuance of our
indications, the security police evinced utmost
determination to solve the Jewish question by all
possible means."
"However, it has been considered
as desirable that the security police should not come
immediately to the frontage, at least not from the
outset, as the extraordinary cruelty of the steps
taken might have aroused the indignation even of the
German quarters. Things should be organized in
such a way as to prove the world that the local
population itself was the first to protest
spontaneously..."
The Judenverfolgung,
the persecutions of the Jews, increased in scope
with every passing year, while the cruelty with which it
was being conducted was beyond imagination. During the
trial in Nürnberg, H. Jackson, the main US
prosecutor, declared in his introductory expose: "In the
occupied western countries Jews were killed and their
properties confiscated. That campaign, however, reached
its acme in terms of cruelty in the East. The
eastern Jews suffered as no people had even suffered
before. The sufferings inflicted upon Jews were
meticulously reported by the local bodies in order to
proved their attachment to the Nazi plan. I will submit
to you only such evidence those are relevant for the
scope of the Nazi project and of the overall plan
regarding the extermination of the Jews. If I tell you
about all these horrors myself, you may think that I am
exaggerating and that my words are not worth believing.
Fortunately, we do not need other witnesses but the
Germans themselves. I invite you to take knowledge of a
few orders and reports out of a huge number of captured
German document that will attest to what Nazi invasion
meant. These documents demonstrate that in 1942 there was
not the Judenverfolgung, the persecutions
of the Jews that was being pursued, but the
Endlösung der Judenfrage, the "final
settlement" of the Jewish question, that is the
Ausrottung aller Juden, the extermination
of all Jews."
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To
Oliver Lustig's Biographical Sketch
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