by Mark Kodama
Camp coffee
I am a Nazi hunter of some fame.
If
I whisper it, you will know my name.
I
brought hundreds to justice in my career.
When they heard my footsteps they shook in fear.
Justice for me is giving each his due.
This is what it means for man and every Jew.
My most infamous catch over the years,
Was the Final Solution’s overseer.
I never did win the Nobel Peace Prize
I was never ready to compromise,
Since I am a Holocaust survivor;
I will not let others forget ever,
Peace prize panels love saints and martyrs,
But avenging angels never.
I was born in Galacia, Poland
Surrounded by more powerful lands.
Our country was invaded seven times,
The last time by the masters of the Rhine.
I was taken, registered, and held in a
Nazi concentration camp. My
neighbors
Were shot in the sandpit.
With every death I died too bit by bit.
Ninety-eight of my relatives were killed dead.
Many murdered by the SS death’s heads.
I remember the dead; I always will.
I can feel their suffering even still.
Six million died in Hitler’s furnaces.
And I am their surviving conscience.
The world will not forget after I perish.
This story from my book The Sunflower
Is about a dying young solider of the SS.
And how he asked me for my forgiveness.
I silently refused I must confess.
Did I do right? I ask you
this.
A.
The Work Detail
Our Russian SS guards led us from camp
We marched to the sound of their obscene songs.
In rows of threes, in columns of sixteen long.
We halted at the crossroad where we rested.
Next to a freshly dug grave yard,
with rows
Of the newly interred, battalions
Of our masters, dead German
soldiers,
And we the living their abject slaves.
A sunflower was planted on each mound.
Their long stalks rising from the ground.
Every sunflower turned toward the sun
As butterflies moved from flower to flower.
Whispering to the souls of the dead and gone.
Now devoid of any earthly power.
Our guards told us it was time to move on.
Our Russians guards again led us in song.
We came to the church on Janowska Street
Made of stone cold red brick and stone.
My God why hath thou forsaken us?
Are you on leave; why are we alone?
When we reached the church we turned left.
The God of Abraham was deaf to our pleas.
We
arrived at my old technical high school
Where we were once savagely beaten by Poles.
At
the time they seemed so vicious and cruel
Now we are both enslaved, share the same hole.
My school was now a makeshift hospital,
For German soldiers wounded in battle,
Youths who were so recently full of life,
Now dying and maimed men on the brink of death.
We
were taken to the main building
Built
in the neoclassical style,
Where
I trained as an architect.
It now
seemed like a many years ago.
Putrid
smell of rotting flesh filled the air,
We
loaded severed gangrenous body parts
Onto
garbage trucks waiting in the square.
Bloody
pus stained bandages arrived in bins,
As
nurses and orderlies scurried about,
The
aftermath of Hitler’s assault on Stalin’s redoubt.
Wounded
German soldiers watched the men work.
As the
Russinas smoked their cigarettes on
the grass.
One
convalescing soldier called us “Jewish swine.”
He
blamed us for his wound.
And he said we would die soon.
B.
The Death Room
A
Red Cross nurse asked if I was a Jew.
I
said “yes” and followed her into the hospital.
I
was a mere slave. What else could I do?
She
turned to see if I was behind her.
The
nurse then brought me to the death room.
She
told me: “Wait here until I call you.”
The
nurse came out of the dark room again.
She grabbed me by my arm and pushed me in.
A severely injured man lay in the bed next
To the night stand. The nurse bent over the bed
And whispered something into the man’s ear
The man quietly replied. The nurse said: “Stay here.”
She touched my hand and she left me with the man.
As my eyes adjusted to the darkened room,
I could see his head swathed in white gauze
With openings for his nose, mouth and ear.
The broken man whispered: “Please come nearer.”
I sat at the edge of the white bed.
“Please come a little nearer” he croaked again.
“Talking loud is exhausting” he said.
His white gauze dripped with yellow stains.
“I
do not have much longer to live,” he said.
“I’m
resigned to death. I do not fear.”
The
yellow stains grew and spread.
“The end is near. I want to die in peace.”
“Before
I pass away, I would like to tell
You
what happened to me on that day,
An
experience that is still haunting me.”
He
was breathing heavily, staring at me.
“I
asked one of the sisters,” he said.
To
bring a Jewish prisoner to me.”
His
ghost white hands rested on the bedspread.
“She
knows how it is with me.
I
am in a death chamber I know.
The
hopeless cases die alone.”
His mother’s letter fell to the ground
I picked up the letter, and put it back in his hands.
“Thank you,” he said, as he drew the letter to him.
“My name is Karl S.”
I joined the SS as a volunteer.
Of course when you hear the word SS . . .”
He swallowed hard; cleared his throat.
“I have to tell you something dreadful
Something . . . horrible.
“It
has been a year since the crime.
Has a year gone by?”
Then
his hand grabbed mine.
“
Yes, a year since I . . .
I
must tell this horrible deed to you
Because you are a Jew.
“I was not born a murderer,” he said.
I’m only twenty-one. And in
my death bed.
I am much too young.
I know what you’re thinking,” he said.
“And I understand.
“My
father, a factory manager, was a Social Democrat,
My
mother brought me up Catholic,
I
was the parish priest’s favorite.
But
I joined the Hitler Youth.
In the Hitler Youth, I made
many friends.
In
the Hitler Youth, I had many comrades.
“When
the war began, I joined the SS.
The
last words from my father were prophetic.
‘They
are taking our son away from us,
Nothing good will come of it.’”
He
clutched the glass of water.
And
returned it to the night stand.
“My
mother must never know of my deed.
She
must not lose her image of her good son.
That’s
what she always called me.
I
was her only child – her only one.”
At
this point, I wanted to get away.
But
Karl grabbed my arm; I stayed.
“Last
spring we prepared for great things,”
Karl said. “Each of us must
be a man.
To be ready for what war would bring.
There was no place for a humanitarian.”
A fly flew around the dying man.
I waived it away with my hand.
“Trucks delivered us to the front lines.
Wheat fields stretched as far as the eyes could see.
As we left the dead and dying Russian soldiers behind.
We heard the wounded scream.
One of our soldiers spat at them.
And said: ‘No pity for Ivan.’
The fighting was brutal. We
gave no quarter.
Death was all over – everywhere.
We shot their wounded; took no prisoners.
It was a hellish Gotterdammerung
over there.”
After
Karl sipped his water, he took a deep breath.
He
then said: “Everywhere there was death.”
C.
The Burning House
“We arrived at Dnepopetrovsk on a warm summer’s day.
Just abandoned by the Russian
Army in haste.
Two children wept over their dead mother where she lay,
What was left of the city was turned to waste.
Suddenly we heard an explosion and we looked up.
A whole block of houses had just blown up.
We were taken by truck to another part of the city.
There were 200 Jews under guard at the square.
Old men, women and children.
I felt pity.
We could feel their stares.
You could see in their eyes – fear.
We walked toward them – we drew near.
“A truck arrived with cans filled with gasoline,
Which we carried into the three-story house.
We knew there would an explosive blast.
We doused the floor with gas.
Then there arrived another truck.
We pushed the Jews inside and
Locked the doors. We posted
A machine gun outside.”
I tried to leave. But Karl
said:
“You must hear the rest.
“We were told all was ready.
We threw our grenades into the house.
Explosion followed explosion
The house went up in a ball of fire.
“My God!” Karl said and began to shiver.
“We heard the screams and saw the flames
As the fires spread from floor to floor.
After my crimes I was not the same.”
I tried to loose my hand.
But Karl grabbed for it again.
“P. . . p . . . please . . . please . . . don’t go away.
Karl said with a stammer. “I
have more to say.
His hand was moist and he sweat some more.
I knew how it would end.
I had heard this story again and again.
“There was a man,” he said, “on the second floor.
He was holding a child in his arms.
His clothes were on fire.
He could not protect his child from harm.
As he jumped from the second story window
We shot him full of holes.
A few seconds later, the child’s mother
Jumped from the window too.
One
burning person jumped after another.
“Oh
God . . . we shot them too.
Karl
lifted his hand to cover his blind eyes.
I
shall never forget the child with black hair and dark eyes.”
Karl
was silent for a moment before starting again.
“Yes . . . I see them plain before my eyes.
I can see the child, father and mother.
I can never forget. It haunts
me still. I . . .
I
could see everything as if I was there.
I could hear everything as if I was there.
That night we drank our rations of Brandy.
And sang songs to forget,
But at the night the dead we did see,
In our dreams they still visit.
The massacre, we were told, was in revenge
For the Russians killing thirty of our men.”
The next morning our platoon leader scolded us.
“’You and your sensitive feelings.
You cannot go on like this.
A Jew is not a human being.
They are the cause of our misfortune.
One must be hard. This is
war.
“When the war turned south we went there.
The fighting was bitter and hard; hand to hand.
We assaulted their trenches; killed them in their lair.
We took a lot of casualties; lost many good men.
Their artillery shells fell like rain.
We drank from flasks of Brandy to keep sane.
“We were ordered to leave our trenches,
And begin our assault;
I fixed bayonet and stepped on our benches
Our platoon left our redoubt.
As we launched into our attack
I was stopped in my tracks.
“Suddenly the dead souls of the burning family.
The father and mother, child in hand.
Had come to greet me
In no man’s land.
A shell exploded in front of me.
And I could not see.
“I nearly lost my life in that hellish place.
Shrapnel from the shell
Tore away my face
And stopped me still.
When I awoke I could no longer see,
My body no longer my own.
“The surgeon said I was lucky to be alive
But even now I am really dead
I was unlucky to survive,
To live my dark painful days in this bed.
I just want to be with my mother
Instead of traveling from one hospital to another.
“I know what my father would say,”
Karl S. said with a sigh.
“But my mother would say . . .
She would see me with other eyes.
At least those Jews died fast.
My pain lingers and lasts.”
I stood up to go.
But his hand held me tight.
So I stayed even though
I wanted to take flight.
“My pains,” Karl said, “from my body are a curse.
“But the pains of my conscience are much worse.”
Not a day goes by
Without my thinking of that family,”
Karl continued. “I long to die,
I wish to end my misery.
When I was a boy I believed in God’s commandments.
I still hold those sentiments.”
“I cannot die . . . without coming clean.
I must therefore confess
About where I’ve been.
But what sort of confession is this?”
Karl said referring to my silence.
In this confession there was true repentance.
Karl then sat up and put his hands together to pray.
“What I told you was terrible I know.
I want to die in peace,” he did say.
What I told you was horrible even though . . .
I longed to confess to a Jew.
And now I’m talking to you .
“I now ask for your forgiveness
I know it is much to ask from you.
But without your answer, I cannot die in peace.”
Silence filled room. But I
could not do anything.
I was helpless. So I left in
silence.
I fled down the flight of stairs
And felt a heavy gloom,
And I made my way into the open air.
I could not give my forgiveness.
I ask you again. Was I right
to do this?
D. The Camp
When I returned to camp, our home in
hell,
I searched for my friends Josek and
Arthur,
For I was still under Karl S.’s
spell.
I wanted to meet my friends to
confer.
Did they think I did things the
right way?
I wanted to hear what they had to
say.
I told them about Karl S. and,
How he asked me to forgive him,
And then how I left him in silence.
In his death room, dark and dim.
A smile appeared on Josek’s face.
Arthur said: “One less!”
Josek said: “You were right not to
forgive him.”
You can only forgive for a wrong
done to you.
If you pardoned him that would be a
sin.
Only the victims could forgive that
dying man.
You had no say; you have no hand.”
“I believe in life after death in a
better place.
What would you say to the dead,
When they came to your face to face?
You would have that guilt on your
head.
You did right; I would have done the
same.
I would have told him directly
without any shame.”
I replied: “You make it sound so
simple, so easy,
Probably because your faith is so strong.
The man was truly repentant and
sorry,
I could argue this for hours long.
I saw he was really in torment.”
Josek replied: “That was only a part
of his punishment.”
I said: “Karl’s repentance was
voluntary
He looked upon me as a representative
of the Jews
Whom he could no longer reach or
see.
Or in any way talk to.
He was not born a murderer
The Nazis made him into a killer.”
“A superman has asked a subhuman,”
To do something superhuman,” Arthur
said.
“If you had forgiven him, you would
never
Had forgiven yourself. All of your days.”
“Arthur,” I replied, “ But I failed.
Failed to carry out the last wish of
a dying man.
I gave him no answer to his final
question.”
Arthur replied: “There are requests
that one cannot answer.
He should have asked for a priest
Of his own church.”
The next day, the nurse looked for
me.
She tried to give me Karl’s
possessions.
But I refused despite her plea.
The nurse said it was his dying
wish.
I insisted they be returned to his
mother
And so I returned to work with the
others.
E. Frau
S.
I miraculously survived the
Holocaust,
But my friends Arthur and Josek did
not,
Arthur contract typhus and was lost,
Josek stricken with fever was shot,
Many times, I barely escaped death,
Only by luck and by a hair breadth.
I survived the mass
executions and starvations,
The gas chambers crematoriums
operated full tilt,
Despite the Red Army Invasion.
Hitler’s minions tried to cover
their guilt.
Crimes so monstrous and terrible
So as to be almost unbelievable.
After the war, after my liberation,
I worked for a commission
charged with the investigation
of Nazi criminal violations.
I hoped it would restore
My faith in justice.
In 1946, I went on a picnic with friends
In Austria, near Litz.
A sunflower field brought back memories of Karl S.
I made up my mind to see his mother.
I wanted to know the boy.
I traveled to Stuttgart, reduced to rubble.
Where I found Karl’s mother
Living in the remains of her abode,
Living in the lower floors.
I said “Are you Frau Maria S?
She simply answered “Yes.”
Karl’s mother bade me to come in
I ambled down the broken stairs,
What was left in ruins.
I saw Karl’s photograph and stared.
There was the young man.
Around the corner was a black band.
That’s my son Karl,” Frau S said.
He was killed in the war.
“I know,” I said.
“She was my only son,” she offered.
“He was a good dear boy.
So many young men are dead.”
“There is so much suffering today,”
She said. “And I am left
alone.
Please sit down and stay.”
I said: “I bring you
greetings from your son.”
She said “Is this true?
“Did he know you?”
“It’s nearly four years since he died.
Tell me when did you see him.”
I never saw him, I lied.
A wounded man passed a note for him
In a train window
I found your address and so . . .”
Frau S. handed me the same bundle
The nurse tried to give to me.
“His watch, notebook and other triffles.”
She handed the bundle to me to see.
“Nurses wrote his letters to me,”
She said. “He was so devoted
to me.”
I approached her son’s picture again.
She said: “Take it down if you please.”
I asked “Is that a uniform?
“Yes, the photograph I would like to see.
“Karl was sixteen,” she said, “When he joined the Hitler Youth.
My husband did not like it. “
“My husband was a social democrat.
He said Hitler in power would lead to disaster,
His words were prophetic.
Hitler did lead us to disaster.
What happened to us
Was punishment from God.
“My husband was killed in his factory
During a bombing run almost a year
After we lost our son
Frau S. picked up the picture of her son,
She took the photograph into her hand.”
Her eyes began to fill with tears for son,
“Karl was such a handsome son,” she said:
“Our son was such a fine young man.
But the Hitler Youth changed him,
And he turned away from religion.
“In our family the Nazis created a divide.
When Karl volunteered for the SS,
My husband was horrified.
My husband said: “’They took the Jews away,
Including our family doctor.
And
They have even taken our son from us.’
The Nazis said they would be resettled,
In their own province,
Among their own people.
Later I heard about the SS,
Their cruelty and brutality,
Their ideology and inhumanity.”
Suddenly, she looked at me anew.
She said, “You are not a German.
“No,” I replied. “I’m a Jew.”
She said: “We lived with the Jews
In peace. We are not
responsible
For their fate. We did not
hate.”
I said: “That’s what they say now.
But no German can ignore his responsibility
One must reap what they sow.
Germans must find who is the guilty
And who is not guilty.
And the non-guilty
Must not associate with the guilty.”
Frau S. said: “So many dreadful things happened.
I can well believe what people said.
But one thing for certain,
Though Karl is now dead,
As certain as the day is long,
Karl never did anything wrong.”
I left Frau S. that day
Without revealing the truth
About what Karl had to say,
The young man of Hitler’s Youth.
I left the good woman in the ruins of her home
With memories of the goodness of her son.
I refused Karl S’s request for forgiveness.
Did I do right? I ask you
this.
The Debt Collector’s Tale
The Debt
A. The Accused
Every person
must pay his debts.
If you wrongs
another person,
You must pay
that obligation too.
Justice is
giving each man his due.
I often hear how
weary people are
About hearing of
the holocaust,
Anti-Semitism, persecution
And oppression. I never tire of the telling.
For these evils
will visit us again
If we let
ourselves forget.
This is the
story of Adolph Eichmann,
His crimes
against humanity,
His wages of sin
and how
He paid his debt
at the end
Of a hangman’s
rope.
Adolph Eichmann
wanted to be a success.
His German parents
moved to Lintz, Austria,
Home of Adolph
Hitler, where his father
Worked for an
electric and tramway company.
His father later
bought a mining company.
Adolph’s mother
died when he was ten.
His new
stepmother was half Jewish.
Adolph did
poorly in school, the only
One of his five
siblings to fail to complete
High school. His
stepmother’s Jewish cousin
Found him a job
as a traveling salesman.
After initial
success, Eichmann his job.
On January 30,
1933, President Hindenburg
Appointed Adolph
Hitler Chancellor of Germany,
In the same year,
Eichmann joined the Nazi Party
And the SS. For Eichmann,
Hitler embodied success.
“[Hitler] may
have been wrong,” Eichmann said.
“But one thing
is beyond dispute: the man
Worked his way
up from lance corporal
To Fuhrer of a
people of almost 80 million.
His success
showed me I should
Ssubordinate
myself to this man.
Hitler made many
promises and lifted
The spirits of
the defeated nation.”
Eichmann’s
“luck” was about to turn.
In March 1935,
Eichmann married Vera.
He was promoted
to corporal in the SS.
His friend Ernst
Kaltenbrunner encouraged
Eichmann to join
the SS security services.
He was hired and
swore an oath of secrecy.
When the Nazis
took power, they banned
Jews from
serving in government.
Hitler, the
Bavarian corporal, wanted to destroy
The ancient and
great people
As part of his
1,000-year Aryan Empire.
Eichmann became
a “Jewish specialist.”
He
studied the Jewish organizations
And
learned Yiddish. Eichmann had
Nothing
against Jews. But he wanted
To
be a part of a movement, a part of history
Of the 437,000 German Jewish citizens,
Two
hundred fifty thousand
Left
the country from 1933 to 1939.
Eichmann
was promoted to lieutenant.
In
1935, Germany passed the Nuremburg Laws
Stripping
Jews of their citizenship and
Banning
marriage between Germans and Jews.
When
Germany annexed Austria in 1938,
Eichmann
went to Vienna. Eichmann worked
With
local Jewish leaders to encourage emigration
And
to negotiate surrender of their property.
He
was always polite but insistent.
Eichmann
consolidating all the departments
Into
one building so all could be approved at one time.
About
150,000 Austrian Jews left in one year,
Making
millions of marks for Germany to fund
Its economic “miracle.” Eichmann
Set
up a similar system in Prague. Eichmann
Was
promoted to lieutenant colonel.
On
November 9 and 10, 1938, German
Paramilitary
forces and civilians launched
Kristallnacht or Night of the Broken
Glass,
Destroying
Jewish homes, synagogues and
Businesses.
One hundred Jews were murdered
And
many more attacked and beaten.
Authorities
imprisoned thirty thousand Jewish men.
Eichmann
was charged with supervising
Kristallnacht in Vienna. The experienced
Transformed
him.
On
September 1, 1939, Germany launched
Its
BlitzkriegI attack on its neighbor
Poland.
Despite
a heroic defense, Poland quickly
Fell
to the Germans attacking from the West
And
Russians from the East. Tanks fought
Against
Polish horsemen as Stuka dive bombings
Rained
bombs on civilians. As war became
More
remote, suffering became more intense.
Poland
would lose 20 percent of its people.
The
Germans changed the policy regarding Jews
From
emigration to deportation. In 1940,
France
Fell
in seven weeks after the Germans invaded
Holland
and Belgium, outflanking the Maginot Line.
Reinhard
Heydrich, the head of the Security Service,
Charged
Eichmann with shipping European Jews
To
Poland. Sixty-three thousand Jews were
moved
Under
appalling conditions by train to Poland,
A
third dying in transport. Eichmann proposed
Deporting
Jews to Madagascar. but after
The
RAF pilots defeated the Luftwaffe
In
the Battle of Britain that the plan
Was
no longer possible.
In
June, 1941, Germany launched
Operation
Barbarossa - the invasion of Russia.
Four
million Germans and allies crossed
The
steppes of Russia, many to their deaths.
The
Fatherland vs. Mother Russia. Twenty
million
Russians
would die in Furherdamarung.
The
Eisenstadtgruppen murdered 1,250,000
Jews
And
many communists, shooting noncombatants
-
Men, women and children – and burying
them,
Many
still alive in trenches. On July 31,
1941,
Heydrich
received a letter from Reichsfuhrer
Hermann
Goering commissioning him
To
draft a plan, “a final solution to the Jewish question.”
In
September, Heydrich told Eichmann
“The
Fuhrer ordered the extermination of the Jews.”
Eichmann
and Rudolph Hoss, Commandant of Auschwitz,
Discussed
the details about gassing victims.
“I
became physically weak,” Eichmann said.
“And
it left behind a certain inner trembling.”
On
January 20, 1942, top leaders gathered together,
At
the Wannsee Conference in a Berlin suburb
To
implement the “Final Solution.”
Eichmann
kept the minutes of the meeting.
Heydrich
charged Eichmann with coordinating
The
efforts of the different agencies.
Hitler
initially planned to kill all Jews
After
the Germans defeated the Russians.
On
December 7, 1941, the Japanese
Bombed
Pearl Harbor. Four days later,
Germany
declared war on the United States.
After
the Americans entered the war
And
the Germans were unable to take
Moscow,
Hitler changed his plans.
Now
he wanted the killings to begin
Immediately. Six death camps were built.
To
Eichmann’s surprise, the conference attendees
All
enthusiastically endorsed Hitler’s plans.
At
the end of the conference, Heydrich, Eichmann
And
Gestapo Chief Heinrich Muller smoked cigars
And
drank brandies together in front of a fire.
“At
that moment, I had a Pontius Pilate feeling,
For
I felt free of all guilt,” Eichmann said.
“Who
was I to judge? Who was I to have my own
Thoughts
on this matter?” Eichmann was only doing
His
duty and following his orders and the law.
At
Kulm, the Germans used mobile trucks
Disguised
as Red Cross ambulances to gas victims.
They
herded the victims into a large room.
And
made them strip and forced them into the trucks
As
they drove away, the victims shrieked.
The
truck drove to an open ditch where workers
Unloaded
the corpses. A man extracted teeth with
pliers.
A
physician told Eichmann to look into
The
inside of a gas truck through a peephole.
“I
refused to do that. I could not do that.
I
had to disappear.”
Eichmann
gathered information on Jewish groups,
Visited
ghettos, seized the property and transported
His
victims to death camps. In occupied
countries,
Jews
registered with authorities and wore yellow badges.
Eichmann
used the Jewish Councils and policemen
To
roundup the Jews. Eichmann transported
One
million Jews from Europe to Poland for execution.
Eichmann
sent Jewish leaders who helped him
To
Theresienstadt where they survived the war.
Meatnime,
the war began to turn. The German Sixth
Army
Was
surrounded and destroyed at Stalingrad.
Allied planes
Bombed
German cities and the British and Americans
Defeated
the German Army in North Africa.
In June 1942, Czechoslovakia
commandos
Jan
Kubis and Josef Gabcik assassinated
The
fanatic Reinhard Heydrich in Prague.
Operation
Anthropoid was planned and
Executed
by the Czech Government
In
exile in England with the assistance
Of
British intelligence. Kubis and Gabcik
Were
flown from England and dropped
By
parachute near Prague. The two young
Commandos
ambushed Heydrich and his driver
As
they drove to Heydrich office at Prague Castle.
After
Garbcik’s Sten gun jammed, Kubis
Threw
a powerful explosive, mortally
Wounding
the reichsfuhrer. Violent reprisals
Followed
in which 5,000 Czechs were murdered
And
the small village of Lidice wiped off
The
map. Kubis and Gabcik and five of
Their
comrades were killed in a six-hour
Gun
battle with the SS and local police.
A great funeral was held in Berlin where
Hitler
praised him as the “best of the Nazis.”
After
the assassination of Heydrich, even
The
highest Nazi officials feared for their lives.
In
February 1943, the Red Army in largest
And
most decisive battle of the war
Captured the vaunted and undefeated
6th
Army after seven-months of ruthless
Street-to-street
hand to hand fighting
On
the city by the Volga River.
By
the end of the battle, the city
Was
rubble with 2 milllion
Killed,
wounded and captured
In
the bloodiest battle of a bloody war.
In
April 1943, Jews in Warsaw ghetto
Led
by young Mordecai Anielewicz rose
Against
the Germans. Prewar Warsaw –
With
its 400,000 Jews – was the second largest Jewish city
In
the world, second to New York City.
Nearly 400,000
Jews
– men, women and children – were herded
Into
a small ghetto, surrounded by a brick wall.
Thousands
died of starvation and disease, their
Naked
bodies buried in mass, unmarked graves.
Starting
in July 22, 1942, 300,000 Jews
Were
deported to death camps or murdered
Outright
over the next seven weeks.
On
April 19, the eve of Passover, the Nazis
Launched
a final assault against the ghetto.
Jewish
freedom fighters, armed with small arms,
Grenades
and Molotov cocktails, used bunkers
And
passageways, turned back German tanks,
Sappers,
cannons, flame throwers and crack
SS units.
For ten days, the rebels repeatedly
Drove
the Germans off, killing one hundred fifty
Battle
hardened soldiers and destroying a tank
And
two armored vehicles. Almost all of the
Freedom
fighters – young men and women –
Perished
in the desperate fighting. The Germans
Set
fire or blew up all the buildings. Fourteen
Thousand
Jews were killed in the fighting. On May
15,
The
German Commander, Gen. Shoop reported:
“The
Jewish quarter in Warsaw is no longer.”
In
fact, the bravery of the Resistance fighters
Would
be remembered by the world forever.
In
March 1944, Germany invaded its ally Hungary
As
the Russian Army closed in. Eichmann was
sent
To
Hungary to arrest and transport Hungarian Jews
To
death camps. Hungary had become a haven
For
European Jews. Admiral Horthy, the head of state,
Had
long resisted Nazi attempts to kill Jews
In
his country. In two months, the number
of Jews
In
Hungary increased from 500,000 to 800,000.
One
forty-seven trains carried 434,351 Hungarian
Jews
to Auschwitz. On October 15, 1944,
Admiral Horthy,
Announced
Hungary’s withdraw from the war.
Horthy was immediately replaced by pro-German
Facists. Eichmann was opposed by the 32-year-old
Swedish
diplomat Raoul Wallenberg who saved
More
than 100,000 Jews. Wallenberg, supported
By
the Americans, created protective passports,
Schutzpasses, which granted Swedish
citizenships
To
those that possessed them. Wallenberg
gave them to
Jews
awaiting transport at deportation centers
And
even to prisoners in trains. The
diplomat
Braved
German weapons, oftentimes stepping
Between
solider and intended victim and dodging
Shots
fired at him while he distributed passports.
Wallenberg
brought the people to forty safe houses
Where
they were given sanctuary. Eichmann and
Wallenberg
met several times. At one point,
Eichmann angrily said: “You are a Jew lover
Who
receives all his dirty dollars from Roosevelt.”
Afterward,
Eichmann unsuccessfully tried to kill
Wallenberg. In November, Eichmann forced
Tens
of thousands of Hungarian Jews on a death march
From
Budapest to Vienna. Wallenberg tried
To
block his efforts at every turn. By December,
The
Russian Army closed in on Budapest and,
Eichmann
and Wallenberg met for a final
time.
Wallenberg
warned Eichmann that Nazism
Was
over. Eichmann said: “I never believed
In
all of Hitler’s ideology but it has given me
A
good career, A good life.” He said he was
Doomed
but determined to complete his mission.
A
few days later, Eichmann left Budapest.
After
the Russians captured Budapest, the Russians
Kidnapped
Wallenberg who disappeared.
There is a 2000-year-old passage in
the Talmud
That
says: “When you save one life, you save the world.”
Raoul
Wallenberg saved 100,000 lives.
One
person can make a difference.
One
family that Wallenberg did not save
Was
the family of my friend Ellie Wiesel.
In
1944, after the Germans invaded Hungary,
Wiesel,
then 15-years-old, and his family
Were
taken by train to Auschwitz and
Then
Buchenwald. The doors of the crowded
Cattle
that held 80 deportees were nailed shut.
One
woman, Cassandra-like, went insane,
Repeatedly
hallucinated, screaming she saw fires.
Young
men in the cattle car repeatedly beat her
To
silence her. When they arrived at
Auschwitz,
Indeed,
large fires belched from the tall
Chimney
of the crematorium. Death and
Burnt
flesh filled the air. They saw bodies
Thrown
in trenches, separated by adults
And
children. At Auschwitz, his mother
And
three sisters were taken away
at
the train station never to be seen again.
Wiesel
and his father were taken to a work camp
Where
they worked under harsh and cruel
Conditions
and starved. They were guarded
By
other inmates which included Poles and Jews.
Periodically,
the sick and the weak were culled out
And
executed. Three inmates who were found
with
Weapons
including a child were hung in front of
The
other prisoners. The child was so light
that it took
Him
hours to slowly die. When the Red Army
Neared
the camp, the Germans made the prisoners
Move
the next camp, oftentimes, running in the snow
Without
food. Those that could not keep up
Were
shot by SS troops. At the new camp.
Wiesel
watched his father dying of dysentery.
No
words can really ever describe
The
fear, the hunger, the suffering, the inhumanity.
But
we try nonetheless.
On
June 6, 1944, the Allies landed at Normandy
Beach
in France and then after breaking out,
Raced
across France. In July 1944, a group
Of
German military officers led by Col. Claus
Von
Stauffenberg tried to assassinate Hitler with a bomb
And
overthrow the Nazi government. The
conspiracy
Which
included Gen. Ludwig Beck, Admiral Wilhem
Canaris
and Gen. Hans Oster, the latter two of
German
military intelligence, centered in Berlin
Reduced
to rubble by allied bombing.
On
July 20, 1944, Count Stauffenberg
Planted
a bomb in Hitler’s headquarters
Wolfsschanze in East Prussia. Four died
In
the blast but Hitler survived, suffering
Only
minor injuries. The coup attempt
Collapsed
and Stauffenberg was shot
And
many conspirators killed themselves
Or
were hung, some with piano wire.
As
the war came to an end, Eichmann
Was
sent to Romania to save 10,000
Ethnic
Germans from capture by Soviet troops.
As
Hungary collapsed, Eichmann was
Recalled
to Berlin. Eichmann, like many
Of
the Golden Pheasants – Goring, Himmler
And
Kaltenbrunner – who demanded Germans
To
fight to the death, fled Berlin as the Russians
Attacked
the city. How could such weak
Men
become so powerful?
As the Red Army moved through Poland,
East
Prussia, Pomerania, eleven million
German
refugees fled west. Russian tank
Crews
machine gunned the fleeing refugees
And
ran over them crushing them under
Their
tracks. Two million women and girls
Were
raped, often times gang raped. Prisoners
Were
summarily executed or sent to Russia
As
slave laborers. Berlin – already
severely
Damaged
by allied bombing - was reduced to
Rubble
and ash. Fighting was deseperate.
The
Red Army lost 30,000 men trying to
Take
Seelow Heights. World War I veterans
And
boys were sent into battle, untrained and
Unarmed.
The SS shot and hung and man
Or
boy suspected of retreated or deserted.
On
April 30, 1945, Hitler and his wife
Eva
Braun killed themselves in their bunker.
Gobbels
and his wife Magda also killed
Themselves
after murdering their six
Young
children. Seven million Germans
Died
during the war. As the war ended,
Eichmann
was captured by the Americans.
When
they discovered his identity, Eichmann
Was
tipped off and escaped his work detail.
In
1950, Eichmann escaped to Argentina
Under
the assumed name Ricardo Klement.
B. His Capture
After
the war, I lived a few blocks away
From
the Eichmann family in Linz. In 1952,
The
family disappeared. A year later,
We
discovered that Eichmann livede
In
Buenos Aires. In 1957, German authorities
Independently
tracked Eichmann to Buenos Aires.
A
young woman was dating Eichmann’s son
Nick. Her father reported this information to
German
authorities. The information was passed
On
to Israel who sent agents to Argentina to find
Eichmann. I had private investigators
Photograph
one of Eichmann’s brothers
At
their father’s funeral to help identify him.
Israeli
Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion
Sent
agents to Argentina.
On
May 11, 1960 Mossad agents captured
Eichmann
as he was walking from the bus stop
To
his home. Three agents wrestled Eichmann
To
the ground before packing him into a car
And
driving him to a safe house. One agent
Began
to interrogate him:
“What
is your name?
“Ricardo
Klement.”
“So
what is your real name?
“Otto
Heninger.
“Were
your SS numbers 45226 and 63752?”
“Then
tell me your real name?”
“Adolph
Eichmann.”
Mossad
agents kept Eichmann for nine days
At
a safe house in Buenos Aries. Eichmann
Was
flown by plane to Israel for trial
Eichmann
was kept at a fortified police station
For
nine months awaiting trial. I helped
Prosecutors
prepare their trial.
C. The Trial
On
April 11, 1961, the trial began. I was there.
It
is the first time I sas Eichmann. He was
Standing in the dock behind bullet proof glass
And
between two prison guards. Dressed in
A
cheap blue suit, he appeared a cardboard figure,
A
colorless bureaucrat, empty and two-dimensional.
He
appeared to not resemble the monster
Of
my imagination, dressed in an SS uniform,
Responsible
for the deaths of six million Jews.
Eichmann had been indicted on
Fifteen
criminal charges, including
Crimes
against humanity, war crimes,
Crimes
against the Jewish people and conspiracy.
On
December 12, 1961, the three-judge
Panel
found Eichmann innocent of ever
Personally
killing anyone but guilty
Of
crimes against humanity, war crimes
And
conspiracy. He was sentenced to death.
On
June 1, 1962, Eichmann was hung.
I
am generally against the death penalty.
Perhaps
it would have been better
If
Eichmann spent the rest of his life
In
prison. But then again, maybe
His
was a special case.
No comments:
Post a Comment