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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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
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Lagerarzt
Lagerkapo
Last
(Burden)
Lebensgefahr!
(Danger of Death)
L
(leiche) [L (Corpse)]
Leichenfledderei
(The Robbing of Corpses)
Leichenhalle
Leichenträger
Lüge
(Lie)
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Lagerarzt
No matter how paradoxical it may
seem, the Nazi extermination camps, had, in addition to
the Bunkers' chiefs, chiefs for gas
chambers, chiefs for the crematoria and
Lagerarzt, the chief medical officer of the
KZ. In the big camps, the
Lagerarzt, the chief medical officer, had a
number of medical officers under him. Almost all were
SS officers. Their main occupation, like of
any other SS-man, was death.
Although I realize that they are
incredible for any "dictionary", nevertheless I feel in
duty bound to state some of the preoccupations of the
SS medical officers in the concentration
camps. I confine myself to write down only those
mentioned by Rudolf Höss, the commander of the
Birkenau-Auschwitz camp, before the
International Military Tribunal of Nürnberg: to
select for the crematoria, immediately after getting down
from the wagons, all those unfit for work, the people,
the sick, the mothers with children up to 14 years of age
included
To be present at the exterminations in the
gas chambers, to ascertain whether the extermination was
total
To convince themselves, through tests, that
the Häftlings of the
Sonderkommando had pulled out all the
golden teeth from those gassed
To pick out every
week those who were seriously sick in the Reviers
and to send them for extermination; to kill by
injections those who could not rise from the bed
To
be present at all executions by hanging and by shooting
in the back of the head
No matter how horrible is this
enumeration, it mast be said that those recorded are but
a part, and a relatively small one, of the criminal
medical activity in the camps, as compared to the
bestiality of the experiments carried out on the living
by these diabolic medical officers.
The experiments in which
the Häftlings served as guinea-pigs
became wide-spread that with the knowledge and approval
of the SS Lagerarzts, the SS
chief medical officers, the fanciest experiments were
concomitantly carried out: maiming surgical operations,
amputations without narcosis. A young medical officer,
König, used to select detainees with inflamed
extremities and practiced amputations. Even the
criminals, who had become overnight made nurses used to
operate. They started whit finger amputations without
narcosis, passed to hand amputations and went up to
appendectomy and ulcer operations.
The SS medical
officers, accursed ones, perpetrated their crimes with
ease, confidently, always in high spirits. The shuddered
for the first time only when, at Nürnberg, the first
paragraph of the indictment was read to them: "Between
September 1939 and April 1945, all individuals named here
worked in agreement, unlawfully, voluntarily and with
full knowledge, conspiring together and with various
other individuals to commit war crimes, as well as crimes
against humanity
"
The endless list of crimes
perpetrated by the Lagerarzte, the chief
medical officers, and by all the other SS
medical officers of the concentration camps was
divided into four categories:
- Lack of medical
assistance and refusal to give medical
attendance.
- Selecting for
extermination
- Scientifically
assassination.
- The experiments on living
persons, about which the indictment said: "
we consider them the most abominable crimes because
they are not only qualified crimes, but include the
most diverse elements of bestial behavior through
tortures, atrocities, made by the medical officers
"in cold blood", whiteout any qualms, with
"scientific" detachment, which represent the very
negation of man."
Any attempt to draw the portrait
of a Lagerarzt can not be, I think, more
realistic, more convincing than the self-portrait made by
Lagerarzt Heinz Beaukötter, the chief
medical officer of Sachsenhausen
concentration camp, before a Soviet tribunal, while
answering the questions of the prosecutor:
The
Prosecutor: "What position did you have at
Sachsenhausen?"
Baumkötter: "I
had to personally attend or to send a subordinate to
the executions, to punishments, to shootings, hangings
or gassings
to make the list of sick detainees
and of those unfit for work, who were to be
transferred to other camps and, lastly, I had to make
experiments in accordance with the orders
received."
The Prosecutor:
"For what purpose did you order that the
detainees, after the beating on the trestle, had to
lunge and to practice ´sportsª?"
Baumkötter:
"This was the custom at
Sachsenhausen and contributed to a
better blood circulation."
The Prosecutor:
"Do you know what were the experiments with
phlegmons?"
Baumkötter:
"Incisions were made on the detainees thighs, and
the incisions were filled with old rags and dirty
straws. This induced the desired
septicemia."
The Prosecutor: "How
many detainees were sent for extermination in other
camps on your orders?"
Baumkötter:
(after meditating for a long time): "About 8.000
detainees were sent off on the basis of the lists I
made."
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Lagerkapo
The central figure in the inner
hierarchy of the concentration camps was the
Lagerälteste, who dominated the mass
of the Häftlings with the help of
cohorts of tens and hundreds of Blockälteste
and Kapo. At
Landsberg there also existed the
Lagerkapo, a Kapo who was in charge of the
whole camp, therefore a position rivaling with that of
Lagerälteste.
Starting the winter of 1944 and
until liberation the Lagerkapo at
Landsberg was Lulu Grünfeld, a
deportee from Cluj. He was a tall, strong man, with a
lead-heavy punch. When he yelled, the whole camp roared
with his strong voice that could be heard even in the
SS quarters.
Lagerkapo
Lulu did not spare either his first or his
voice.
In the morning, in the
Appellplatz, people would jostle each other
to enter those detachments that were in charge of a less
savage Kapo. But then Lulu would come and
the Häftlings would fall to the ground
under his heavy fists as if mowed down. Order was
restored within a few minutes.
While hitting the detainees, he
roared:
"Attention! Chests out! Why are
you bending like milk-soaps?"
"It-s bitter cold. We are
frizzing, Herr Lagerkapo," some
Häftling who was a native of Cluj
dared.
"Who's the son of a bitch?" Lulu
roared, punching to the ground the one that had dared
protest his order.
In the concentration camps there
were no days of rest. The detainees worked on Sundays,
too. December 25, 1944 was the first day when we were not
taken out for work. The morning roll call had been held
in daylight for the first time. We feverishly thought
that, al last, we would be able to keep one day indoors,
protected from wind and snow, to dress our wounds and
sleep
sleep.
But this time, too,
Lagerkapo Lulu invented something to prove
his zeal: he ordered that some of the
Häftlings should chop wood for the
SS men all day, while others should clear
the snow in front of the barracks. He selected the
detainees himself. Among them there was a young man of
Cluj. He plucked up courage, stepped out of line and
stopped at attention in front of Lulu, after he had taken
off his cap. He was shivering from top to toe with cold
and fear.
"Take pity! I'm the youngest of
all and I'm almost barefoot. Let me repair my sabots. I'm
from Cluj, too. Please
"
He could not finish his
entreaty. With a punch Lulu threw him to the ground; then
he began shouting while kicking him with the
boot:
"Were do you think you are, you
miserable creature? Back home, close to your mother's
skirts? This is a concentration camp, you son of
bitch!"
Late that winter,
Landsberg No 1 was put in quarantine as the
typhus was playing havoc among the detainees. The sick
were moved to the neighboring camp Kaufering
No 4. In its unheated slam barracks, some 4.000
Häftlings, lying on bare boards and
covered with rags struggled with the unbearable fever of
typhus.
Three weeks later those who had
remained at Landsberg resumed the work. We
gathered in the Appellplatz where the
detachments were reorganized. After much beating and
swearing they managed to from 15 detachments, one hundred
people each that was accommodated in the first 15
barracks. Those detachments were supposed to carry cement
into the Mohl forest. The cement bags had to be carried
on one's back from the skirt of the forest to a place in
the middle of the forest, where they were building an
underground factory. For the weakened detainees being
selected in the Mohl detachments was sure death. That is
the reason why the 16th detachment was
impossible to from. The Häftlings
threw themselves to the ground, saying they were sick and
asking to taken to the Rivier. They did not
care about beating any more. They knew that if they were
to carry cement they would not be able to survive more
than two or three days.
Passing among us, those
pretending to be sick. Lagerkapo Lulu
spotted a detainee from Cluj. He made him a sign to stand
up and follow him:
"I know you're all weakened,
particularly you, the younger ones. I'd like to spare you
a little, so that you may not say I forgot you. Tell the
detainees from Cluj and your friends that a detachment
called ´Special Command Wª will be formed. It
will be an easier job, at the outskirts of a village,
where you will also be able to get some food."
While in the middle of the
Appellplatz the Kapos were
still beating and swearing at the detainees in the
attempt to from the 16th Mohl detachment, in a
corner of the camp a Kapo invited, in a
strong voice, all people wishing to work in ´Special
Command Wª to gather and form in a line. As hundreds
of people rushed to the Kapo, Lulu came to
the spot to make order.
"Why are you crowding like
animals? There are too many of you. We only need one
hundred people", he roared, knocking down with his heavy
firsts all those jostling each to enter the already
formed lines.
When the column was ready, he
ordered:
"16th Mohl Detachment
attention! To barrack no 16 forward march1"
We started to move on slowing
and staggeringly, as if making for our own
graves.
Lagerkapo
Lulu grinned with satisfaction:
"Who did you think you were
trying your strength against?"
After liberation they
looked for Lulu for weeks and months on end. Former
Häftlings from Dachau
and Feldafing, from
Bergen-Belsen and Mühlhausen
kept coming to Landsberg every day.
They first asked not about whom of their relatives and
acquaintances had survived, but about Lagerkapo
Lulu, who had become famous in all concentration
camps in Bavaria. If someone had pointed his finger at
him, then he would have been killed on the spot, without
any trial.
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Last
I carried a huge backpack on my
shoulders all the way from the ghetto to the railway
station. On the road leading to the unknown we had been
allowed to take &emdash; out of everything we had, of
everything our grandfather and grand-grandfathers had
gathered &emdash; as Mich. as one could carry on his
shoulders from the ghetto to the station. That huge
backpack &emdash; in which I had packed clothes and
books, bedclothes and food, my childhood and my
teenager's dreams (I was 18) &emdash; left bruises on my
shoulders and hurt my soul.
When we arrived at
Birkenau-Auschwitz, the doors of the 50
wagons in which we had been crowded were unlocked and
pushed aside, and then on the platform one could hear but
one order:
"Heraus! Schneller
heraus! Alles dort lassen! Get down! Quickly!
Lease everything on the spot!"
We formed into two columns: one
was dragging towards the gas chambers, the other towards
camp E. We had all been relieved of our
backpacks. But their Last, their burden
continued to lie heavy on our shoulders and hurt our
hearts.
At Birkenau-Auschwitz
the detainees were put to carry blocks of stone
uselessly. Some carried them up a slope, while others
carried them back down the slope. The next day they
changed roles. When we climbed up the slop[e, the
stone on our backs seemed to become heaving with every
other step. When we carried the stone down the slope, it
was as if the whole sky was but one huge block crushing
us under its weight. The fear that I might slip and that
the block of stone rolling down the slope might hurt or
even kill the Häftlings in front of me
was paralyzing.
Leaving Birkenau
it was not only the crematoria that I left behind, but
also its nocks of stone. But their Last,
their burden kept on crushing my shoulders and my soul in
all the camps I was moved to.
In the Bavarian forests we
carried fir trunks. Some 40 Häftlings
lent over the trunk at the same time. The
Kapo yelled:
"Auf! Los, auf,
verfluchten Hunde!" Up, quickly up, you bloody
dogs!
Each word was accompanies by a
heavy blow on our bent backs. The Kapo had
a long heavy cudgel with which he could break three
spines with just one blow. Those hit tried hard to raise
the trunk, but the trunk would not move as the other
Häftlings, who were not within the
reach of the Kapo at the moment, helplessly
leant upon it. When the Kapo reached them,
they tried hard under the Kapo's heavy
blows, while the other Häftlings,
relieved of the cudgel menace, stood passively and
touched their wounds. So the Kapo would run
from one end of the trunk to the other, shouting:
Auf! Los, auf, verfluchten Hunde! and
hitting the detainees at random for minutes on end until
we straightened our backs, raised the trunk on our
shoulders and painfully started to move.
The trunk had to be carried on a
distance of almost two kilometers. But after barely a few
steps some of the detainees, whose wounds left by the
huge backpacks they had carried from the ghetto to the
station, then by the blocks of stone they carried at
Birkenau-Auschwitz started to bleed would
lower the feel the Last, the burden
suddenly growing. And then they would lower their
shoulders, too. The bang with which the trunk fell to the
ground made us shiver. The Kapo and his lot
heavy cudgel that could break three spines with just one
blow were back at work.
A Landsberg I
worked in the "white detachment" in night shifts. That
was a group of a few hundreds of detainees selected to
carry cement bags from the skirt of the Mohl forest up to
its middle, where foundations were being laid for a plane
factory. Kapos planted within one hundred
metered from each other on the route ensured a constant
pace with the help of their cudgels.
I never understood how could I
carry the cement bag on my shoulders that were badly hurt
by the huge backpack, the heavy blocks of stone of
Birkenau, or the pine trunks of the
Bavarian forest.
From the moment I left the
ghetto carrying that huge backpack on my back, in which I
had packed clothes and books, bedclothes and food, my
childhood and my teenager's dreams, and I made my first
step towards Birkenau-Auschwitz forty-five
years ago, it was only once that I felt my soul and my
shoulders relieved of that burden. It happened during
that unique, unbelievably bright moment when, mad with
joy, I fore off my striped clothes and ran beyond the
fallen gates of Landsberg, howling so that
the whole would should hear me, so that I should hear it
my self: I'm free
freeee
Yes, it was then alone. And only
for a short moment, because afterwards my shoulders and
my soul continued to bleed. Even today, after forty-five
years, the Last, the burden of the huge
backpack I carried from the ghetto to the railway
station, the burden of the blocks of stone al
Birkenau-Auschwitz, of the pine trunks of the
Bavarian forest, or of the cement bags I carried during
moonless nights in the terrible winter of the 1944-1945
keeps hurting me. Actually it is the burden of
deportation I have never been relieved of, for I
will carry it on my back and in my heart to the end of my
life.
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Lebensgefahr!
At Birkenau-Auschwitz
we had been told, the very moment of our arrival,
that the barbed wire surrounding and dividing camps
A, B, C, D, E, F was conducting high
voltage current. Lethal current. Along the fences and
five meters in front of them, the "thoughtful"
SS-men had planted stakes, two hundred
meters from each other, supporting rectangular plates on
which one could read the following, in white letters
against a black background: Lebensgefahr!
Danger of death. Skull and crossbones had been placed
under the inscription to make it even more
alarming.
Suchlike warning plates had been
placed everywhere in the camp. If, for various reasons, a
ditch had to be dug for the installation of a cable, a
new plate with the inscription Achtung!
Lebensgefahr! Showed up on the spot.
There was one dangerous place
where there was no warning plate. The gas chambers.
Rectangular plates were hanging on their doors, indeed,
but they were not black and had no skull and crossbones
on them. Instead, the plates on the doors of the gas
chambers were of immaculate white carrying just one word,
written in four languages (German, French, Greek and
Hungarian), in larger letters and relaxing colors:
Waschraum, bathroom.
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L
(Leiche)
Being pointed the
L letter on their backs, was regarded by
many detainees with indifference as they through that the
L letter stood for Lager.
Some of them did not realize not even when they entered
the gas chamber, that L mark they had worn
on their backs stood for Leiche (corpse).
As a matter of fact, from the moment onwards nothing of
what had happened or of what might have still happened
had any importance any more. For them it was the
implacable beginning of the end. And the end was a very
short one, lasting ten minutes at the most.
Around the large camps, the
mother-camps so to say, such as Dachau, Mauthausen,
Buchenwald, Bergen-Belsen, Ravensbürck,
there was a multitude of smaller camps that did
not have gas chambers. When the decision was made to
terminate the emaciated
Häftlings, not by tens but by
hundreds, they were moved to the mother-camps, provided
with "perfected extermination facilities". A 25
centimeter-high L was painted in indelible
paint on the back of each transferred
Häftling to prevent them from mixing
with other Häftlings, upon arrival,
which would have rendered the operation more
difficult.
Once arrived in the new camp,
the marked Häftlings had to wait one
day and night, at times even more, until their turn came.
Crammed into barracks already filled with other
detainees, some of the newcomers would learn about what
was in stone for them and then try all night through,
while the others were sleeping, to remove the paint with
saliva, or rule it off with their nails and teeth. Poor
things! They did not know that the paint was
indelible!
At one time during this
desperate struggle with death someone had the salutary
idea of cutting the marked patch of cloth and turning it
inside out. One only had to get a needle and some thread
from the tailoring workshop, and for this one had to have
a friend among the Kapos or the
Blockältesten. The trick was quickly
found out and with it the idea it self was gone. Instead
of painting a 25 centimeter-high L on the
back of the Häftling they started to
tattoo a tiny L on his left arm. Now that
the meaning or the tattooed letter had become known,
the Häftling did no longer try to rub
it off with his nails or teeth. He just looked at
it.
However, on entering the gas
chamber, most of the marked detainees still believed that
the tattooed L on their arms meant
Lager. It was only when feeling that they
were choking and toying to make themselves more room with
the help of their arms that, taking glimpse of the
tattoo, they realized, for a very short while, that
L actually stood for Leiche
(corpse).
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Leichenfledderei
Initially, the extermination
camps were meant only to be
Todesmühlen, death factories, and the
deportations &emdash; the most efficient method of
supplying those factories. All those entering the gates
of the concentration camps were considered ccandidates to
death. Those who did not directly to the gas chambers
were called living corpses. But, yet corpses.
Soon, the SS-men
discovered Leichenfledderei als
Profitquelle, robbing from the corpses as s
source of profit. Immediately, the Central
Economic-Administrative Directorate of the
SS was set up, headed by
Obergruppenhführer1-SS
Oswald Pohl, to whom all the concentration camps were
subordinated.
The living corpses had to be
exploited to total exhaustion. The commanders of the
camps received orders to use the Häftlings
in slave labor "bis zu den Grenzenihrere
Körperlichen Kräfte", to the limit of
their bodies' strenght. Greedy to receive as much money
marks as possible from the big trusts for the
Häftlings' slavery work, Himmler
towards the end of the war, when the cams supplying with
fresh candidates to death became more difficult
personally intervened to prolong with a few weeks the
average life span of a detainee in the concentration
camps.
Another method: the delivery of
Häftlings to the trusts for experiment
purposes. Here are five letters on this subject, recorded
by the American Military Tribunal in
Nürnberg.
The first letter:
"In connection with our intention to experiment a new
soporific, we would be glad if you place at our disposal
a number of women. Waiting for your reply..."
The second letter:
"We have received your answer.200 marks for a woman is
too big a price. We agree to pay at the most 170 marks.
If this price is acceptable to you, we shall take the
women. We need about 150 women..."
The third letter:
"We confirm the receipt of your consent.
Prepare for us 150 women whose
health is as good as possible. The moment you announce us
that they are ready, we shall take them
over..."
The fourth letter:
"We have received the 150 women ordered. Although they
are in a state of exhaustion, they have been considered
satisfactory. We shall keep you informed with the course
of the experiments..."
The fifth letter:
"The experiments have carried out. All the persons
have died. We shall soon get in touch with you in
connection with a new delivery..."
Leichenfledderei als
Profitquelle, the robbing of corpses as a source
of profit, witnessed a sharp diversification.
Before being exterminated, the
buckle cavity of the Häftlings was
examined. If they had gold or platinum teeth, they were
marked on the chest, thus facilitating the removal of the
precious metal dental works after shot or gassed. A
detainee from the Sonderkommando prized
open with a crow bar the jaws of the marked corps, while
another pulled out or, more correctly, tore off the gold
teeth. After cleaning them in a solution of hydrochloric
acid which decomposed the bone and flesh bits that clung
to the metal, the teeth were melted and turned into gold
bars of half a kilogram each before sending them to the
Reich's Bank. It has been estimated that from
Birkenau-Auschwitz alone 6.000 kilograms of
dental gold were sent to Berlin.
The same brutally was used to
tear out the ear-rings from the women and the wedding
rings from the fingers. After liberation, thousands of
kilograms of wedding rings were found among the gold
stocks discovered in the concentration camps (the
SS had not had the time to send them to
Berlin).
At the Nürenberg trial,
Emil Phul, former vice-chairman of the Reich's
Bank, stated: "In the summer of 1942, the
chairman of the bank and the minister economy, Walther
Funk... told me that he had reached an agreement with
Reichsführere Himmler with regard to
keeping in the bank a quantity of gold and jewelry
belonging to the SS. He told me it was a
matter of wealth confiscated in the occupied eastern
regions and asked me to refrain from putting further
questions.
Among the objects deposited by
the SS in the bank there were jewels,
watches, spectacles frames, gold fountain pens and other
such objects in huge quantities, confiscated by the
SS from the Jews, from the victims in the
concentration camps and from other persons".
The hair too was used;
Colonel-General of the SS Pohl took
personal care, to the smallest details, of that matter.
He addressed letters to the commanders of sixteen
extermination camps asking: "... that all human hair
collected in the concentration camps be turned to
account. The hair could be industrially processed to make
felt or to spin it into thread. The women's hair, well
combed and correctly cut, could be made into felt-toots
for the U-Boot crews and into felt socks for the German
railways' staff. It is therefore ordered that all the
hair obtained from the female prisoners be carefully
disinfected and kept. The hair obtained from the males
can be used only if it is more than 20 mm in
length..."
The circular letter ended by
adding: "Starting from September 5, 1942, on the fifth of
each month reports will be sent concerning the quantity
of hair collected from the males and, separately, from
the females".
Some 60 tons of hair were sent
from Birkenau-Auschwitz alone. According to
the orders, the female hair was valued at 0,5 marks per
kilogram. On the liberation, the Soviet troops still
found in the camp seven tons of hair cut from 140.000
women.
At
Birkenau-Auschwitz everything was turned to
account. The flesh and blood of the
Häftlings included. Doctor Vilem
Jorovic, detainee No. 32046, underlined in his deposition
that in 1943 an Institute of Hygiene for the members of
the SS-units headed by an
SS-ist, Weber, was established on the
territory of the Auschwitz concern. "Human
flesh, brought from the crematoria, where the camp's dead
were transported daily, was used in this institute in the
preparation of bacterial cultures. The blood for the
experiments was taken from the sick detainees, from the
convalescent ones and from those executed by shooting. It
was the cheapest means to get human blood and flesh,
which the Nazi lacked at the end of the war".
Human flesh was in sufficient
quantity. A cool cynicism and a rationalization of
assassination were evident everywhere in the
camp.
Leichenfledderei,
the robbing of the "living corpses" and of the "true
corpses", was total. The ashen were used as
fertilizer.
1
Colonel-General.
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Leichenhalle
When I arrived at
Birkenau-Auschwitz, I was only 17 and I
terribly feared death. Until then I had never looked at a
corpse. My families were all alive. Only a grandfather
had when I was very little and I no longer remembered
him. But in Birkenau-Auschwitz, in camp
BIIE my fear of death vanished after the first days.
Death was there such an ordinary, frequent and prevailing
phenomenon, that you could no longer tell which was first
and foremost: life or death. We, those alive, were
actually Totenkandidaten, candidates to
death. They called us walking corpses and we mixed all
the time with the dead-corpses because all those who died
of diseases or exhaustion, who committed suicide or were
beaten to death at night or during the day, stayed on
with us the barrack or in front of it till the evening
Appell, when the corpses had to be lain at
the right flank of the front. In order to count them more
easily, some SS men claimed that the
corpses should be supported in vertical position. It was
after Appell that they were taken to the
Leichenhalle, the morgue.
W. Kielar recalls that at the
beginning the Leichenhalle, morgue, of
Birkenau-Auschwitz lay in the cellar of
block No. 28 and was endowed with about two dozens of
boxes which served for carrying the corpses to the
crematoria and some stretchers for carrying the dead from
blocks to the morgue. When executions by shooting were
started the wooden stretchers were replaced by plate iron
ones, as the traces of blood could be removed more
easily.
To enter the
Leichenhalle, the morgue, of concentration
camps was similar to entering the Hell. The sight was
apocalyptic.
Denise Leboucher noted down in
her notebook in Ravensbrück: "An
underground shelter of reinforced concrete. Some stairs
and an open door: the smell of disinfectant mingling with
the stink of corpses pilled up one over the others. A
nightmarish sight... A silent ossuary, bare bodies or
rather skeletons, true mummies without dressings, yellow
like parchment, or violet and blue, often already spotted
with green... tumefied abdomens, the bones of the pelvis
so bulging that they penetrated the hips... an arm cut
off, a leg bleeding like meat in the slaughter
house.
On the autopsy table a corpse
laid open... not even bleeding... A female doctor, if one
could call her so, zealously cutting, hacking and
extirpating liver, stomach, lungs, heart, all these awful
viscera taken out in order to see what was in the dead
body; then, once the examination is over, everything is
thrown back into the open belly and that piece of human "
meat" is tied up in haste. Terrifying rictuses, bulging
eyes, screwed up faces, grinning teeth which seem willing
to bite dust because the bodies were thrown heaps upon
heaps. A woman, who died in childbirth, the infant still
tied to her through the umbilical cord and the little
corpse between her legs, like a doll with open
eyes.
When the
Leichenhalle, the morgue, was cramped,
another one in open air was set up. Smaller camps did not
have a special building for Leichenhalle,
for the morgue, simply a place was assigned for
pilling up the corpses, heaps upon heaps, waiting for
their turn to be incinerated or buried. The same Denise
Lebourcher who worked in the morgue of
Ravensbrück recalls: "I often happened
to be complied to clear with a spade the snow that had
covered the dead women during the night. The only white
shroud they were allowed to have. The bodies were frozen.
The sad noise of disentangled corpses was painful. It
seemed to me that the operation could still hurt them.
Sometimes they did not wait until the dying women from
the Revier expired, and quite often some of
those poor creatures ended their agony among the corpses
pilled up in the Waschraum, lavatory. One
day something horrible happened. In the morning, when the
sexton detainees entered the morgue to bring in fresh
corpses, a bear, mad woman rushed out shrieking from that
cave and collapsed into the snow. She had spent the night
buried under a pile of corpses... She had woken up among
the dead bodies, she herself frozen with cold and fear.
Panic-stricken she rushed out and collapsed in front of
the door. She was quickly taken to the
Revier... The poor miserable lived for
another three days and then she really died."
The largest
Leichenhalle, morgue, in the open, a
hallucinating morgue was the one in
Bergen-Belsen. "When the camp was liberated
&emdash; Christian Bernadac wrote in his book &emdash;
the English found there 13.000 corpses laid on the
ground, heaped up in piles, between the blocks, in the
blocks, on the stairs of the blocks, in front, behind the
blocks, everywhere. They found corpses serving as
benches, corpses-benches and corpses-chairs, corpses-beds
(lice desert the dead)."
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Leichenträger
The reason for the existence of
the concentration camps was death.
Killing went on day in and day
out. Consequently, the job of Leichenträger,
corpse carrier, was among the most important in a
KZ. At Birkenau-Auschwitz,
beside those gassed, the number of the dead, -- executed,
worn out, crushed and trampled underfoot, electrocuted --
was so great that the Leichenträgern,
the corpse carriers gathered them from blocks, from
Appellplatzs, from toilets as if they were mere
objects. In the precincts of the morgue the corpse
carriers behave just like in an ordinary
workshop.
W. Kielar, who during five years
spent in Auschwitz was also a
Leichenträger, a corpse carrier,
recalls: "I often went down into the morgue to have a
chat. Gienek Obojski got some potatoes. As there was a
coke stove in the cellar we used to bake potato pies on
it. We sat on confines around the heated stove, the pies
were sizzling and their pleasant smell was tickling our
nostrils, stronger than the reek of chlorine the corpses
had been sprinkled with. We were so used to the corpses
that had been sprinkled with. We were so used to the
corpses that they no longer moved us at all."
At the beginning, in
Birkenau the corpses were carried on
srtretchers. When they proved insufficient for the task,
carts replaced them, which filled up with corpses were
pulled and dragged by Leichenträger,
the corpse carriers. W. Kielar recalls: "The pile was
increasing. It was more and more difficult to throw the
corpses up. Gienek arranged them one near the other, just
like wheat sheaf's during harvesting.
Holding the corpse by the hands
and legs and swinging it mighty well, we threw it up
where Gienek with his legs wide apart and wall set into
the pile of trunks, arms, legs and heads, caught it and
arranged it in layers so that the cart should take in as
many of them as possible. In this way, he spared our time
and work, which we wanted, finished as soon as
possible.
The carts were cracking and the
squeaking wheels set into motion, leaving deep traces in
the humid ground. Soon one of the wheels, seemingly
passing over softer earth went deeply into the ground;
the shaft turned with a sudden jerk and Objski was thrown
like a ball into the wall of the next block. The
overloaded cart slanted. Some of the medical orderlies
managed to jump aside in time. A loud crack and the
overloaded cart turned upside down in a second, in the
clamor of swears and moans of those who did not manage to
jump aside and who were buried under a pile of
corpses."
In Kaufering and
Landsberg, actually in all smaller
KZs almost everyone had to carry corpses by
turns.
I mean the bodies of our
fellow-inmates who died at work. To carry them on your
shoulder, some four-six km. after 12 hours of toil was a
nightmare, particularly in winter. The columns of
Häftlings always marched in rows of
fives. Each corpse was varied by four detainees, thereby
making up groups of five in order to facilitate
surveillance and counting. The corpse-bearer had to be
replaced quite often. Utterly exhausted by the work which
lasted the whole day, faint with hunger, unable to hold
tight the corpse on their shoulders with their fingers
benumbed, walking into the knee-high snow, after some
100-150 meters they could no longer hold their burden
which fell down. And then the riding whips of the
SS-men and cudgels of the
Kapo's urged them to raise it up again and
further carry it on their shoulders.
At Bergen-Belsen,
at the end of the war, whole blocks of
Häftlings were turned into
Leichenträgern, corpse carries. The
crematorium oven had burnt out, so the
SS-men decided to burn the corpses on
bonfire. Heaped up in huge piles, the corpses were set on
fire. But this practice was soon to be abandoned because
of the lack of wood to keep the fire burning. The camp
was full of corpses. When the British troops started to
draw nearer, the SS-men decided to have
some huge pits dug in the earth. The most difficult thing
was to drag the corpses to the pits. One of the
survivors, who had been deported from Hungary, recalls:
"The deportees in our part of the camp were ordered to
drag to those large pits the corpses from block no 11,
then all the other corpses scattered through the camp and
finally a large amount of women's corpses brought in
lorries from the women's camp' and unloaded on the main
alley of the camp. Nobody was exempt from this work, nor
could anyone avoid it. As we were very weak, in the end
they allowed us to pull by fours the dead bodies tied at
joints with rags or whatever could serve for the purpose.
The groups followed one another in a line, making up a
two kilometers procession advancing stumblingly and moan
kingly under the strikes of tens of Kapo's
who had become uncontested masters. Many of us died. This
lasted from April 11 to April 14. Thereafter, nobody was
able to do it anymore. For this work which lasted from
early morning till night we got a helping of soup and
nothing else, neither bread, nor water, because the camp
was wholly contaminated with typhus. The inmates fought
for a piece of beet. The typhus took its daily toil of
hundreds of victims. Detainees died of starvation by
hundreds."
Le Druillenec of France
was also deeply impressed by his work as
Leichenträger, corpse carrier, al
Bergen-Belsen: "We tied stripes of blankets
to the wrists and ankles of the corpses witch we chose
out carefully. First we selected the smallest bodies:
they were weaker and more emaciated than I could have
even imagined. Therefore, the smallest were the lightest.
Then we looked for the corpses, which had not blackened
too much. Our first duty in the morning was to bury the
recent dead who had been brought to the mortuary yard
from various barracks and not the dead in the morgue.
Despite the fact that over 2.000 people were compelled to
do this job, every morning we had to clear the mortuary
yard before we could enter the morgue and bury the older
dead. We set out from the northern gate of the yard,
dragging the corpse behind, some two meters far from the
following and precedent groups respectively. If the
distance increased, a stroke over the head made us
quicken our steps. We went along the central alley to the
inhumation pits. Flanking the alley the
Kapo's saw to the ceaseless progress of the
operation."
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Lüge
I learned almost all the words
and phrases in this Dictionary by hearing
the SS-sits, Kapo's,
Block-and Lagerältestes
shouting them. They shouted them ceaselessly and overtime
accompanied them by blows. So that I learnt them first
and only after that I perceived their meaning. Some, very
few, being but rarely and surreptitiously uttered, I
understood after a long time, having tried thousands of
times to grasp their meaning. Among these is the word
Lüge, lie.
When the liquidation of the Cluj
ghetto started, a Hortyst lieutenant, accompanied by a
SS one, officially and solemnly informed
us: "You will be transported to Dunántúl,
To a modern labor camp, were, you can do useful work in
munch better conditions than here."
Having learnt that no one could
take more than one could carry on his back up to the
railway station, a commotion bordering panic gripped the
ghetto. A new announcement was made to us: "All those who
leave shall pack their belongings in boxes and bundles on
which they will write their names. The letters will be
written legibly in black ink so that the authorities will
have no difficulty in their transport and subsequent
distribution."
After the departure of the first
transport of 3000 people on May 26, 1944, the first
post-cards arrived in a few days and described the
favorable conditions in the modern Dunántúl
camp.
Everything was nothing else but
eine Lüge, a lie.
The reality: those who left the
ghetto, having been embarked in cattle-wagons, got off
only on the selection platform at
Birkenau-Auschwitz. And between the
selection platform and the gas chambers the distance was
under a kilometer.
In some ghettos, the people were
told to take along, if they could, timber, which would be
used for fitting up the barracks in the labor camp in
which they would be transported. Some did. At
Birkenau, the timber found in the wagons
was used for burning, in trenches, the mothers and
children, on the days when the crematoria could not
cope.
In Poland, when the transports
to Treblinka, were started, the
SS-ists haunches the rumor: "he who
volunteers for work outside the ghetto receives their
kilograms of bread and margarine." The men, whose
families were on the verge of death from hunger,
literally rushed. They stood in queue in fours to be
registered. After embarkation's, the trains went directly
to Treblinka. There, from the wagons, the
men were taken directly to the gas chamber.
In the Nazi concentration camps,
die Lüge, the lie, was made ruling
principle and carried almost to perfection.
The
Untersturmführer-SS Dr, Becker, in
charge of the first vans used for the extermination by
gassing, reported: "I ordered that the vehicles in
D group be disguised as sleeping quarters
and for this purpose I ordered that the small ones be
filled with a window on each side. And the bigger one
with two, similar to those we often see in the peasant
houses."
At Mauthausen,
those meant to be liquidated by gassing were
transported to the gassing installation at the
Hartheim castle in postal vans to which
false windows had been fitted and which were painted blue
in order to give them "a more gay appearance."
When it was decided at
Ravensbrück that the small annex-camp
at Uckermark be turned into an
extermination camp, die Lüge, the lie,
was bunched that it had been turned into a convalescence
camp and was given the name
Jugenlager1. The sick, all the
exhausted women were advised to declare that they had not
the strength to work so that they would be sent in the
convalescence camp. In order that the big
Lüge, lie, be credible, the camp was
provided with a Revier and a women doctor,
who was known and appreciated by the female detainees,
was sent there.
Of course, the truth became
quickly known. The respective Revier had
neither medicines, nor heating and not even pallets; the
sick women who arrived in the convalescence camp were
immediately made to take off their overcoats and every
woolen gourmets and forced to stand in the snow for days,
almost without food, until their turn to go to the snow
for days, almost without food, until their turn to go to
the gas chamber came.
When it was decided to liquidate
the Theresienstadt camp, the Nazi
authorities gave the following order:
The SS
Governmental Commission
of the Reich for the mobilization
and distribution of the citizens
obliged to do forced labor
Call-up Order
every male Jew from
the territories under German protectorate is informed
that, on the orders of the above authority, he comes
under the total mobilization of the labor force. The
departure for the work places will be in-groups.
Before leaving, the mobilized is obliged to show to
the delegate of the above-mentioned authorities the
tools or instruments needed for practicing his
profession, winter clothing, bedding and provisions
for a week. The date and the hour of departure will be
noticed.
Theresienstadt
Signature
Date
20,000 male Jews apt for work
arrived on the death platform at
Birkenau with such orders. All were
gassed and turned to ashes in the flames of the
crematoria.
After 11 days, new trains
from Theresienstadt arrived at the same
platform. Only women and children got down from the
wagons. No selection was made. All were formed into
columns and sent directly to the crematoria. On the
floor of the anteroom to the gas chamber, among
dresses, footwear and children's toys, after each
transport there were hundreds of summonses with the
following texts:
Summon
The above named authority
allows the wife and children of
, Jew from the
territories under German protectorate, mobilized for
work, to go to the place of work of the
above-mentioned Jew and to live as a family for the
duration of his forced labor. An adequate house is
placed at their disposal. The family members will take
with them winter clothing, bedding and provisions for
a week. Theresienstadt
Signature
Date
This Lüge,
lie, of unheard-of meanness, sent to death 20.000 devoted
wives who wanted to lighten their husbands' fate and
thousands of children who had no other fault but that
they were born Jews and that they wanted to see again
their father.
The SS-men lied to
us every day, at every step.
On April 27, 1945, the commander
of Landsberg No 1 gathered all the
Häftlings in the court and told us, for the
first time in a solemn voice, without shouting: "An
agreement was concluded between the SS and
the International Red Cross: We shall go in marching
column to the Swiss border where you will be handed over.
I demand of you order, discipline, submission. Who strays
outside the column will be shot."
I was the last
Lüge, lie. In reality, the column had
to reach Dachau, where Himmler's order to
liquidate all the detainees without exception, had
already arrived.
The column was freed by the
American troops when it was a few tens of kilometers from
Dachau.
1 Youth
Camp.
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To
Oliver Lustig's Biographical Sketch
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