when I said good-bye to my family it was not in this place. The tears around me are too plentiful, the pain too raw, as mothers and daughters are driven apart. I shut my eyes but I cannot shut my ears.
|
There is a smudge on my left boot. Spitting into my palm, I stoop to wipe it away. It is white again.
|
"Line up! Get into rows of five! Raus! Raus! " The prisoners poke us with sticks. The SS aim their guns at us. We are civilians unfamiliar with military drill. We line up clumsily. "March! Stay in your rows! If you step out of line you will be shot! March!" One thousand girl-women step in semi-perfect time, in semi-perfect rows of five, through the iron gates of Auschwitz. Above our heads, welded in iron, are the words ARBEIT MACHT FREI , and we believe what the sign says: ''Work Will Make You Free."
|
"We are young," we remind ourselves. "We will work hard and be set free. We will see what happens." But on the outside we are walking as if we are doomed. It is raining, chilled like March rain. We are lost in thought but it is too cold to do much thinking. Everywhere it is gray. My heart is turning gray.
|
There are men along barbed-wire fences, in striped jackets, caps, and pants, watching us. 2 Their eyes reflect nothing. I think to myself, This must be an insane asylum, but why would they make the mentally ill work? That's not fair.
|
I do not comprehend my surroundings. I keep thinking, I am well brought up, well educated, well dressed. I was looking very nice when I went to the barracks in Slovakia wearing my beautiful suit, though it does not look so good now. Still, my white boots look pretty and spotless because I've been careful not to step in any mud. Walking through these gates, I forget my resolve and think
|
| | 2. Prior to March 26, 1942, the only prisoners in Auschwitz were men, mostly Polish Gentiles serving time for their political or religious beliefs and Russian prisoners of war.
|
|