A Lucky Child: A Memoir of Surviving Auschwitz as a Young Boy (10 page)

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Authors: Thomas Buergenthal,Elie Wiesel

Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #General, #United States, #Biography, #Social Science, #Personal Memoirs, #Europe, #History, #Historical, #Military, #World War II, #World War; 1939-1945, #Holocaust, #Jewish Studies, #Eastern, #Poland, #Holocaust survivors, #Jewish children in the Holocaust, #Buergenthal; Thomas - Childhood and youth, #Auschwitz (Concentration camp), #Holocaust survivors - United States, #Jewish children in the Holocaust - Poland, #World War; 1939-1945 - Prisoners and prisons; German, #Prisoners and prisons; German

BOOK: A Lucky Child: A Memoir of Surviving Auschwitz as a Young Boy
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The barrack in which we were housed held inmates with a skin disease: scabies, or
Krätze
in German. They appeared to have scabs all over their bodies and scratched all the time. Every morning they would line up,
be inspected by a young Polish doctor, and usually be given an orange salve. I was afraid that I would catch this disease
and went to see the doctor a few times. He was always very kind to me and gave me advice on how to avoid coming down with
scabies. On one occasion, he handed me a piece of soap — it had been quite a while since I had seen soap — and told me to
wash my hands frequently. Every so often, he would examine me and express delight that I had not contracted scabies. He made
sure that I always had enough soap. From time to time, he also slipped me some bread and arranged for me to be moved to a
corner bunk at the other end of the barrack, away from the entrance and those parts of the barrack where the other inmates
tended to congregate.

When I was pretty sure that I would be able to avoid getting scabies, I began to like my life in the hospital camp.
Maybe the SS forgot us,
I thought, hoping that I was right, and for a while, it seemed that that is what had happened. The only unpleasant part about
being in that barrack was its proximity to the crematoriums. Many a night I would wake up to screams and pleas for help coming
from the crematorium area, as people were being herded into the gas chambers. It was terrible. At first I would lie awake
shaking. Then, when I fell asleep, I would have nightmares, terribly scary and vivid nightmares in which I was being beaten
or executed. They made me afraid to sleep because the same nightmares kept returning night after night. After a while, without
realizing what was happening, I had found a way to cope with my nightmares: In my sleep, while the nightmare was upon me,
I would hear myself say, “This is only a nightmare; there is nothing to be afraid of.” And the nightmare would vanish. After
that, whenever I was half awakened by the horrified screams coming from the nearby gas chambers, my mind would unconsciously
transform them into nightmares, and I would continue to sleep.

Then, one night, when I kept hearing terrified voices all around me, I went right on sleeping, believing that I was again
having one of my nightmares. But when I woke up the next morning, I was told that the SS had come during the night or very
early in the morning and dragged out all the people who had been brought to this barrack with me. It was a miracle, I thought,
that the SS had not found me. Soon, though, I learned how I had been saved. When we first arrived at this barrack, a red X
had been placed on the backs of our individual index cards. My friend, the young Polish doctor, apparently tore up my card
and issued me a new one without the red X. When the SS came in and demanded the cards with the red mark, my card was not among
them. The doctor had saved my life, and my nightmares saved me from witnessing what was happening that night and possibly
giving myself away.

I remained in the hospital camp for another week or two. Then one day the doctor called me to his little cubicle and told
me that I was to be moved to the children’s barrack in camp D. Having learned to be suspicious — not of him, of course, but
of the people with whom he had arranged my transfer — I kept asking him how he could be sure that my destination was camp
D and not the gas chamber. He assured me that I had nothing to worry about. That turned out to be true. A few hours later,
I was taken to the children’s barrack in camp D. To this day, I don’t really know how this transfer was arranged. All I remember
is that I was picked up by an SS guard, the oldest SS guard I had ever seen. He did not look like the other SS guards I had
encountered. They were usually young, seemed to pride themselves on their military bearing, and appeared to enjoy mistreating
us. This man was kind and kept telling me that I would like the children’s barrack in D camp and that I would be safe there.
He was the first SS guard in whose presence I did not fear for my life. Later, I heard that by 1944 old men were being drafted
into the SS because the young ones were needed at the front. It may well be that this SS guard was one of these draftees.

Before I arrived in the children’s barrack, I did not know that such a barrack existed. I was told later that it was the brainchild
of a German political prisoner. He had saved a group of teenagers from the gas chambers by convincing the SS that it made
no sense to get rid of the kids when they could be made to perform useful work in the camp. The SS agreed to let him prove
it and put him in charge of a barrack that housed only children. In time, other boys ended up in that barrack. Most, if not
all, of the kids in the children’s barrack were older than I. As soon as I had met the head of the barrack and was assigned
to a bunk, I recognized two friends: Michael and Janek. I knew them from Kielce. They had survived the murder of the children
in the labor camp of Kielce by hiding in the attic of the house where the children were being held before they were taken
to the cemetery. I was delighted to see them again. Given our common Kielce experience, we became inseparable and thought
of ourselves as brothers.

Garbage collection was the main job to which most of the children were assigned. Sometimes we also had to collect garbage
in other camps. We would pick up the garbage in various places, put it in wooden carts, and take it to a garbage dump. Three
or four kids were usually assigned to a cart. Michael and Janek somehow managed to have me put on their team. In general,
our work was not very difficult. But when it rained, which happened often, our shoes and the wheels of our cart would sink
into the mud, making pushing the cart much harder.

Once, we ended up close to one of the women’s camps. We were sent to pick up some garbage in C camp, which was bordered on
one side by our D camp, enabling the men and women in these camps to engage in yelling conversations across the electrified
fence. My father had found out that my mother was in B camp, which meant that we could not see her from our camp. But as soon
as we had entered C camp, Michael, Janek, and I, together with two other kids, began to push our cart close to the side of
the fence that bordered B camp. Whenever we saw any women on the other side, we yelled over to them in Polish and Yiddish
that they should alert women from Kielce. A few minutes later, we recognized some women we knew from Kielce, among them relatives
of Janek and Michael. Then I saw my mother. When she saw me, she began to cry and call, “Tommy, Tommy!” And if some women
had not held her back, she would have tried to touch me through the electrified fence. All I could think of was that she was
alive, while she kept repeating, “
Du lebst, du lebst!
” (“You’re alive! You’re alive!”) Then she asked about my father. As I began to tell her that my father had been shipped out
on a transport, a woman Kapo raced over and chased all the women away from the fence. For months afterward, I kept replaying
her words in my mind and seeing her tear-covered, smiling face through the fence. What mattered was that she was still alive
and not a
Muselman:
she was thin but looked well under the circumstances, and, I kept saying to myself, she was very beautiful even without her
hair. Not long after that encounter, I heard that a large number of women, including my mother, had been sent to another camp
in Germany.

Our barrack boss treated us well and distributed the rations fairly. Only rarely did the rations suffice to overcome that
lingering feeling of hunger that had become part of me. Still, I always resisted eating anything we found in the garbage.
Since we were also responsible for the garbage of the SS kitchen, the temptation was great to eat the remains of a sandwich
or to lick a can that still contained a few slivers of food or some drops of soup or sauce. Whenever I saw such items in the
garbage, I would remember my father’s repeated warning never to eat anything from the garbage lest I get terribly sick. Once,
though, a special opportunity presented itself. While collecting garbage outside the SS kitchen, we looked through the open
window and saw that no one was in the kitchen at that moment. Near the stove stood a pan filled with milk. It had been years
since Michael, Janek, and I had tasted milk. We looked at each other, and without saying a word, Michael climbed into the
kitchen through the window. He took a big gulp of milk, then passed the pan through the window to us. Janek and I took a few
sips from the pan and handed it back to Michael. He put whatever was left of the milk back where he had found it and climbed
out again as fast as he could. Had we been caught, our punishment would have been a very severe beating or worse. But we were
not caught, and to this day I can still taste that heavenly mouthful of milk. No milk has ever tasted as good. Years later,
when my own children would have to be coaxed to drink their milk, I would think of that milk in the SS kitchen and be grateful
that they never had to risk their lives to get it. At the same time, I would have to hide my anger that they did not appreciate
what it meant to have milk in abundance. But how could they? For many of us who survived the camps, food took on an almost
mystical quality. Despite the fact that I am not religious, I consider it a sin to throw bread away, however stale it might
have become, and will walk miles to feed it to birds or, remembering my job as
Shabbat goy
in Kielce, let my wife throw it away instead.

Not long after I had seen my mother, the older boys in our barrack reported in conspiratorial tones that there were rumors
that the Germans were losing the war and that the Russians were approaching. I did not really know what to believe or what
it all meant. The thought that we might soon be liberated never quite entered my consciousness. I could think only of the
cold Polish winter that was upon us and the fact that it was ever more difficult to stay warm. It must have been late December
1944 or early January 1945. The soil under our feet was frozen. The mud was no longer a problem, but the ice made it hard
for us not to slide while pushing the garbage carts. Of course, the garbage was also frozen and difficult to load. As we worked
on breaking it up, we consoled ourselves with the thought that frozen garbage did not smell.

Then, one morning, we were awakened by repeated announcements coming at us in those harsh German command tones to which I
never quite got accustomed: “
Das Lager wird geräumt!
” (“The camp is being evacuated!”) We were ordered to line up in front of the barrack with our blankets and other possessions.
My possessions consisted of a thin blanket, a spoon, and a metal container that served both as my cup and soup plate. I always
had the cup tied by a string to the piece of rope that served as my belt. Next, we were ordered to march through the main
Birkenau gate. The road outside the gate was already lined with thousands of inmates, standing about eight or ten people abreast.
“Children to the front of the column!” came the order. Our barrack was to be in the lead. The column was so long that it took
us quite some time to get to the front. It was freezing, and a very strong wind was blowing through our clothes. As we stood
there waiting, we were thrown a loaf of black bread. Then the order came: “
Vorwärts marsch!
” (“Forward march!”)

The Auschwitz Death Transport had begun.

CHAPTER 5
The Auschwitz Death Transport

AS WE BEGAN TO MARCH
, leaving Birkenau gradually behind us, I looked back toward the vast stretch of land with its hundreds of barracks, administration
buildings, guard towers, and electrified wire fences. Further in the distance, I could see the remains of the crematoriums
that the SS had tried to demolish. I could not really believe that I was leaving this terrible place alive. I remembered what
my father once said in the Ghetto of Kielce as he and a few friends shared a bottle of vodka: “Do not despair. Sooner or later
we will win this war and bury them deep under the ground.” And I could hear my mother trying to shush him by warning that
“the walls have ears.” But he would not be silenced. Years later, I wondered whether my father really believed what he had
said, or whether it was vodka-induced optimism or hope or both. Now, as I looked back on this vast murder factory, I felt
victorious and kept repeating to myself, as if addressing Hitler directly, “See, you tried to kill me, but I am still alive!”

Of course, the march had only just begun, and I had no idea what lay ahead. And what lay ahead turned out to be worse than
anything I could have imagined. The roads were covered with snow and ice. It was January, after all, and a typical Polish
winter. As the sun gradually set, it became colder and colder. The trees along some of the roads gave us temporary protection
against the icy wind that would blow against us and pass right through our thin clothes. I was wearing my mother’s boots,
which she had given me before we reached Auschwitz. My socks had been taken away when I had arrived at the camp. In their
place, I used some rags to keep my feet warm. Michael, Janek, and I stayed close together, trying to keep warm. We were getting
tired and realized that those of us from the children’s barrack, having been ordered by the SS guards to the front of the
column of marchers, had it harder than those who followed on the snow and ice we had already trampled down. By late afternoon,
Janek, Michael, and I found it increasingly difficult to keep up and decided to let the marchers pass us until the rear of
the column was almost upon us. Then we jogged to the front again. Once we realized that this maneuver worked, we kept repeating
it. Of course, we were getting pushed aside or bumped by the marchers, but that was a small price to pay for the respite it
gave us.

It was already dark when the SS halted the march for the night and allowed us to sleep on the road where we had stopped and
in the drainage ditches on either side. By that time, some marchers had already died. Those who could not go on and sat down
by the side of the road or simply collapsed were shot by the SS guards, who kicked their bodies into a nearby ditch. Over
the next two days, many more would die in this manner. After a while, I would no longer jump when yet another shot was fired.
As I got ever more tired, and the cold, windy air began to hurt, I wondered whether it would not be easier to lie down and
let them kill me. The prospect had its attraction because it would be speedy and liberating. But I would almost immediately
banish that thought and push myself even more. “If I give up, they will have won,” I kept muttering to myself. Staying alive
had become a game I played against Hitler, the SS, and the Nazi killing machine.

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