Read A Lucky Child: A Memoir of Surviving Auschwitz as a Young Boy Online
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
A few days later, we learned that Germany had surrendered. The celebrations were even wilder than those that took place when
we heard that Berlin had capitulated. The shooting and drinking continued for hours, into the night and even on the next day.
The soldiers in my company were singing the Polish national anthem and all kinds of other Polish songs I had never heard before.
Every so often, someone would raise his glass or bottle and drink to Poland and to the victorious Allied armies. Some soldiers
stood around in small groups and spoke of home and of their families in Poland; others, with tears in their eyes, kept saying
that they never thought they would live to see the end of the war and the defeat of Germany.
I was not sure whether to be happy or sad. Of course, I was happy that the war was over and that we had been liberated. But
when the soldiers spoke of their families and of home, I was reminded that I did not know where my home was. I had no home
without my parents, and I did not know where they were. I was sure that if I had survived, they must have survived too and
that they would find me! In the meantime, my company was my home. But what would happen to me when all the soldiers went home?
I decided that there would be time enough to answer that question, and for all I knew, it might never present itself since
I was sure my parents would find me before the army was disbanded.
I had a wonderful time as we moved through Germany after its capitulation. Along the way, some soldiers from my company had
come upon what remained of a German circus. There they found a beautiful pony and a miniature cart. They brought both to me,
and one of the soldiers told me, “We liberated it for you. It needed a good Polish home.” Now I spent many hours combing and
feeding my new companion. I would ride the pony for fun, but when the company had to move, I would sit behind my pony in my
little cart and follow the horse-drawn wagons that were carrying our supplies. Along the way, soldiers from other companies
would wave and shout to me as we passed. Before I got the pony, I had also acquired a small pistol of the type that women
would carry in their handbags. I think it was my shoemaker friend who gave it to me. Since he had warned me that the five
bullets in the magazine were the only ammunition he had been able to find for the gun, I shot it only once in order to find
out whether the gun really worked. It did. From then on, I carried the pistol very proudly in a holster the shoemaker had
made for me and polished it often.
We moved at a much slower pace through Germany after its capitulation than before, and we stayed for days in different towns.
Many of the houses were empty, since their owners had fled in advance of the arrival of Soviet troops. We basically had the
run of these towns. Some of the soldiers from my company amused themselves by breaking windows in the houses and causing all
kinds of other damage. Encouraging me to follow their example, the soldiers would tell me that the Germans deserved that and
more for all the suffering they had caused in Poland.
I did not see much excitement in breaking windows and preferred to play or to ride my pony whenever we stopped in a town for
a few days. But one day a young soldier invited me to come along with him for some good fun. With his
pepeshka
submachine gun slung over his shoulder — this was a gun with a round magazine that almost all the Soviet and Polish soldiers
used at the time — he guided me to a narrow street and pointed to the telephone poles lining the road. “See those white porcelain
cups with the electric wires wound around them?” he asked. “We are going to try to shoot them down,” he said, as he clicked
a lever on the gun so that it would shoot only one bullet at a time. He had many misses but also some hits. When hit, the
porcelain would shatter on the sidewalk, adding to the noise the
pepeshka
made. After a while, he handed me the gun. First, he had me aim it at a nearby fence “to give me a feel for the gun.” It
was not very heavy, and the round magazine seemed to help steady it. I had no trouble hitting the fence, but it took me a
while to hit the targets on the telephone poles. I got the hang of it after a while. From then on, my friend and I would go
hunting for these porcelain cups whenever we came to a new town. To this day, whenever I see telephone poles with porcelain
cups, I recall, not without some shame, my acts of vandalism of long ago and feel a suppressed yearning to try it at least
one more time.
Our meandering through Germany came to an end when my company, with all its equipment, was ordered to embark a train to Poland.
The train stopped many times as we traveled, frequently alongside trains crowded with Soviet troops. We would then all get
off our train and engage in friendly banter with the Russians. Poles and Russians would trade in all types of “liberated”
items. The Russians would display their “
czassy
” (watches) — they would proudly show off four or five watches on each arm — and offer to trade some of them for other watches
or jewelry. They seemed fascinated by what made watches tick. I remember one of them putting a watch under the wheel of a
railroad car, while the train was being shunted about, to see what would happen to the watch when the car had gone over it.
Everybody cheered when he retrieved the flattened watch and ceremoniously displayed the shattered pieces to us.
There were more cheers and much rejoicing when the train crossed into Poland. Our destination was a military garrison in the
Polish city of Siedlce. There I shared quarters with a group of men from my company. The soldiers played a lot of soccer and
cards as they waited to be demobilized and allowed to return to private life. There was also a lot of goofing around. A frequent
pastime consisted of waiting until some unsuspecting soldier entered one of the outdoor privies near one of the barracks.
A few soldiers then materialized out of nowhere, lifted the privy off its hole, and tipped the wooden structure on its side
with the poor victim screaming and swearing.
At the garrison in Siedlce, I started to spend more and more time with a young soldier in my company who was Jewish. Over
the years, I have forgotten the names of many people, but the name I most regret not remembering is that of this young soldier,
although I still have the photograph he gave me of the two of us in our uniforms. While I imagine that many of the soldiers
in my company guessed that I was Jewish, I kept that information to myself for fear, probably unjustified, that they would
no longer treat me as one of their own. I did, however, tell my friend but asked him not to let the other soldiers know. Whenever
we talked, he kept asking me what I planned to do in the future. Of course, I had no idea. I had not really thought about
it, probably because I expected my parents to find me any day soon. He kept shaking his head, very delicately, trying to make
me realize that it would take them a long time to find me, assuming that they were still alive.
Thomas Buergenthal (left) in a tailormade Polish Army uniform,with the soldier who took him to the orphanage, 1945
One day he let me know that he had to go away for a few days. He returned from his trip very excited and told me that he had
found a wonderful Jewish orphanage in Otwock, near Warsaw. He had told the director about me, and she indicated that I would
be most welcome to stay there until I found my parents. I would love it there, my friend assured me; I would meet many children
my age who had also survived the war. Besides, our company commander had told him that a military garrison was not really
the right place for an eleven-year-old boy.
A few days later my friend and I were on a train bound for Otwock.
THE JEWISH ORPHANAGE OF OTWOCK WAS HOUSED
in a white, longish, rectangular, two-story building, with a big front yard and a garden in the back. Surrounding it all
was a thick pine forest where mushrooms, blueberries, and wild strawberries grew in abundance. A narrow paved road led to
the orphanage from the town of Otwock. The orphanage could also be reached by walking through the forest along some well-trodden
paths. Before the Second World War, Otwock was a well-known resort with many sanitariums where people suffering from tuberculosis
could stay. Some of these facilities, converted to other uses during the war, lined one side of the road leading to the orphanage.
For me, the Jewish orphanage served as a halfway point from one life to another. It was here that I underwent a gradual transformation
from being a perennially frightened and hungry camp inmate struggling to survive to an eleven-year-old child with a relatively
normal life. I enjoyed almost every minute of my stay at the orphanage, although there were moments when I looked back with
nostalgia on the adventure-filled life I had in the Polish army and wished I still had my pony with me.
The orphanage housed teenage boys and girls, as well as some younger children, separated into different groups. I was placed
with the oldest group of boys. Here I was the youngest among some fifteen to twenty boys, which made me feel very important.
Not all the children in the orphanage were real orphans. Some still had one or both parents. These children had been temporarily
placed in the orphanage while their parents sought to reestablish their lives or were still abroad. I was among those whose
parents, as far as we knew, had been killed during the war. We were the real orphans and saw ourselves as the orphanage’s
tough guys, lording it over the other kids. In some perverse way, our attitude resembled that of hardened criminals or “lifers”
in a prison who take pride in their status. At the same time, of course, I continued to believe, without telling anyone, that
my parents were alive and would find me one day soon.
The vast majority of children in the orphanage had been hidden during the war by Polish families or in convents. During that
period, some of them lived under terribly difficult conditions. One girl, Tamara, who was my age, spent more than two years
hiding in the low attic of a house. There was no room in that attic for her to walk or even to stand up. By the time she was
liberated, her legs had become seriously deformed. Other children and their parents had managed to obtain false identification
papers. This enabled them to pass themselves off as Poles in various towns and villages around the country, though they lived
in constant fear of being denounced to the Germans. Some of these children were left to fend for themselves when their parents
were caught in SS raids. Among the older kids, there were also some survivors of different German work camps. Each of us had
a story to tell that was more horrendous than the next, but we rarely, if ever, talked about our past, although my friends
loved to hear me regale them with tales of my life in the Polish army.
Since I was the only one in the orphanage who had survived Auschwitz, our administrators publicized this fact. As a result,
I was frequently interviewed by journalists and trotted out to meet important visitors. I even appeared occasionally in the
newsreels that were shown in Polish movie houses in those pretelevision days. From time to time, we were also visited by representatives
of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (the “Joint,” as it was known), the organization that, I believe, was
the orphanage’s main benefactor.
We were treated very well in the orphanage. When I first arrived, I was examined by a doctor who decided that I was too thin
for my age and needed to be put on a special dietary regimen to gain weight. For quite some time thereafter, my breakfast,
in addition to the standard bread and boiled eggs, consisted of a bowl of light cream into which I usually stirred strawberry
jam or orange marmalade. Some kids who were on this special diet did not like the cream we were served. Since I loved it,
I frequently traded my eggs for their cream. Never before had I eaten so well! There were moments when, on seeing all that
wonderful food in front of me, I felt sure that it was all a dream and that, instead of the white cream I thought I saw, I
would wake up and look down on the snow we ate on the Auschwitz Death Transport. In the late summer or fall, when the mushrooms
in our forest were bursting out of the ground, our cook would send us out to gather them for her. For the next few days, we
could count on wonderful mushroom soup or some special mushroom dishes. I thought I was in heaven.
When I arrived at the orphanage, I did not know how to read or write, apart from what my parents had tried to teach me surreptitiously
in Kielce. I am quite sure, though, that I must have received some individual instruction from one of our counselors before
I was sent to the nearby Polish grade school attended by the other kids from the orphanage. Curiously enough, I remember almost
nothing about that school, how long I was there, what grade I was in, or what I learned. It may well be that I was there for
only a brief period of time. But a couple of things stand out in my mind from my time at that school: the big crucifix that
hung above the blackboard, and the daily prayer our Polish classmates intoned every morning while crossing themselves. Even
though I did not participate in this exercise and was quite uncomfortable just standing there, I soon learned the words by
heart and can to this day still recite them in Polish.