Scheisshaus Luck: Surviving the Unspeakable in Auschwitz and Dora
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‘‘Stay there! You’re contaminated.’’
Looking over papers at another desk was that Austrian Gestapo officer wearing the same black leather coat. His black hat was hanging on a coat rack. Now I knew I was in trouble. The question was who squealed on me and for what? Oddly, the Austrian looked up at me puzzled.
‘‘ Warum ist dieser gute Lu¨gener noch hier?’’ (Why is this good liar still here?) he asked the officer.
‘‘He’s our orderly in the ward. You know him, Herr Brunner*?’’
The officer asked.
Again the Germans arrogantly assumed I couldn’t speak their mother tongue.
* SS Captain Alois Brunner was the Commandant of Drancy from June 1943 until August 1944. When the Germans took over the Italian zone of France, he was sent to Nice to oversee the roundup of Jews. Brunner was responsible for deporting 24,000 people from Drancy to the extermination camps.
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‘‘He’s an accomplished liar.’’ He stared directly at me. ‘‘Someone sure did a lousy job burying a box of jewelry and gold watches in the basement of that house.’’
I kept a blank look on my face. Obviously he hadn’t found Claude or the message in my pump, but he had kept his promise and returned to our house. After hearing that the Nazis were emptying every safe and bank in Nice, I took it upon myself to bury my mother’s best jewelry along with my father’s gold watches in the dirt floor of our basement.
The Austrian went back to his paperwork.
‘‘Ship him out when the crisis is over.’’
‘‘I was going to send him to Compiègne. The kid is a political.
He’s not circumcised,’’ the officer replied.
‘‘No. Put him on a transport to Ausch . . . Germany.’’
The officer nodded, then turned to me.
‘‘Take that box of supplies to the infirmary.’’
What a Christmas present, I thought as I walked back, a train ticket to a German prison. If only I could figure out a way to infect the incoming prisoners with the fever, then Stella and I could work in the infirmary until the end of the war.
♦ ♦ ♦
Finally the dreaded moment came. All the scarlet fever patients were either cured or dead. The quarantine ward was empty and our deportation date was set. The honeymoon was over.
‘‘Don’t drink the wine anymore,’’ Stella instructed.
‘‘Why?’’
‘‘I want to do it like it’s supposed to be. I want to be a real woman.’’
I wanted Stella so much, but had never attempted to make love to her and had never brought up the subject because of my fear of losing control, as I did on the staircase. Pregnancy could be a disaster for a female prisoner. There had been two sisters in the camp and one of them had been pregnant. The other wanted to tell the PART I | DRANCY
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Germans about her sister’s condition, believing it would prevent her from being deported. A red armband quickly straightened her out.
‘‘How can you be so naive? She won’t be able to work and she’s creating another mouth for them to feed. She will be the first on the train.’’
So I kept drinking the awful-tasting wine. But Stella became impatient, nearly frantic. There was an urgency in her eyes that puzzled me. I mulled over the possibility that she had had a premo-nition, but something stopped me from asking.
At the first opportunity, I snuck into the camp’s administration office and stole the key to the storeroom. Late the next afternoon, after I had finished my shift, Stella led me down the hall. I turned on the light. We stretched out on a pile of coats among the stacks of suitcases and quickly pulled down our clothes.
‘‘Make love to me.’’
She was biting her lip and her face was flushed with anticipation. I kissed her as I slid on top of her. I felt a resistance. She whimpered. I couldn’t believe that as I entered her my mind drifted.
When would we be able to do this again? Where were they shipping us? Would we stay together? How could I face her parents?
Stella started moaning softly. We had to keep quiet. I muffled her mouth with my hand, and suddenly she sounded like Kiki, my pet guinea pig. Stella held me tight, her fingernails digging into my back. She let out a subdued groan, trembled, then relaxed. I pulled out just in time.
Her eyes closed, Stella smiled. ‘‘Now I won’t die a virgin.’’
Stunned, I blurted, ‘‘Don’t be silly. You’re going to live a long life.’’
She stared at me as if she hadn’t heard my fairytale words, then she cuddled on my chest. To classmates and friends I had always proclaimed with some bravado that I was a fatalist, and here I was unnerved by the girl whose virginity I had just taken. What she was hinting at was darker than anything I dared to imagine.
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♦ ♦ ♦
What was Stella thinking now, I asked myself as our bus arrived at the rain-soaked freight yard in the Paris suburb of Bobigny. I peered out the window. The boches weren’t spoiling us with comfortable passenger compartments this time around. No, we were going to travel like farm animals. My belly was filled with fear. I was glad Jonny, the circus strongman, hadn’t removed his arm from around my shoulder.
As our bus pulled up to the loading ramp, Nazi guards were locking one of the cattle cars. I had foolishly hoped to catch one more glimpse of my Stella before we were loaded. Now I would have to wait until we reached our destination, wherever that was.
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‘‘Forty Men or Eight Horses’’ was stenciled on the side of the cattle car. I followed Jonny up the rain-slicked ramp. We squeezed inside and began jockeying with the others for a spot where we could comfortably sit on our luggage. When the Nazis locked the door, silence fell over us. It was as if we had all stopped to admire how a single action utterly defined our predicament.
They had told us in Drancy that we would be riding for two or three days, so when the train started moving the guessing games of our destination began.
‘‘We’re going to stop in Metz for screening.’’
‘‘What do you mean, screening?’’
‘‘Why would they give us food when Metz is less than a one-day ride?’’
‘‘It seems that there is a big camp in Saxony.’’
‘‘Do you think we’re going to clear away the rubble in Berlin?’’
‘‘I know that we’re going to Theresienstadt.’’
‘‘Theresienstadt is only for old people.’’
‘‘Let’s pray we don’t go to a Polish ghetto.’’
‘‘Shut up, you silly fools,’’ Jonny snapped. ‘‘We’re going to the spas of ‘Pitchi Poi’.’’
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You won’t find ‘‘Pitchi Poi’’ on any map. Someone in Drancy, long before I arrived, had dreamt up this fictional destination because it was a big Nazi secret where these transports were bound.
‘‘Let’s find a way of getting out of here before this train goes too far,’’ Jonny said.
Hypolite, a weasel-faced little fellow in his early twenties whom I had never crossed paths with in Drancy, stood up.
‘‘Listen. Everybody, listen. I’ve ridden this line to Alsace more than a hundred times. We left Bobigny at noon, correct? At this speed we should be at the place that I’m thinking of at around six o’clock. There’s a steep hill and the track curves at the top. The train will be moving like a snail then.’’ He glanced at his watch.
‘‘It’s three o’clock now. We have enough time to get the job done.’’
‘‘Yes, but we need tools to get out of here,’’ someone shot back.
Hypolite smiled.
‘‘I don’t do anything without forethought.’’
Tucked into his socks was a rasp with one end sharpened like a chisel, a saw blade, and a pair of pliers. From inside his hatband he pulled out a drill bit. Many of th
e men moved closer to the little fellow. He definitely had my attention.
‘‘No sense in trying to force the door open. More than likely it’s wired to an alarm. The best thing is to cut an opening in the back wall,’’ he said moving to the rear of the car. ‘‘If anyone has a better idea, speak up now.’’
No one spoke. Hypolite nodded and, using the pliers to turn the drill bit, he began to bore a hole in the back wall. Despite the thickness of the planks, it was a relatively easy task.
‘‘Hey, you could enlarge the hole with the rasp,’’ I suggested.
‘‘The saw blade will never cut through.’’
Hypolite agreed and I began to file. After a few minutes I stopped to catch my breath and Hypolite peered through the hole.
He told me to take a look. The next car was the caboose and I could see the silhouette of a sentry standing in the brakeman’s shelter.
Fortunately the boche hadn’t noticed anything, but it seemed our chance to escape had vanished. A few went off and sat in despair.
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‘‘Why not try the other end?’’ a Hasidic Jew whispered.
‘‘No. Two or three might jump off, perhaps, then the rest would be shot like pigeons,’’ Jonny said.
‘‘The hell if I’m going to let myself be taken off in a cage like a circus animal,’’ Hypolite spit.
He dropped to the floor and attacked it with his drill. As he slaved away, sweat dripped from his forehead and his shirt stuck to his back. The region we were passing through was white with frost, but it was stifling in the car. The two small windows barely provided any ventilation, and our fifty packed bodies gave off heat like freshly sheared sheep. I was broiling in the three layers of winter clothes that I had piled on the night before.
The floorboards were stronger and twice as thick as the planks of the back wall. Even when his hands began to bleed, fingers ravaged with splinters, Hypolite’s determination didn’t waver. Realizing the drill wasn’t long enough to go all the way through the wood, he wound a handkerchief around the saw blade and went to work on the edges of the hole until it was funnel-shaped. He pounded the rasp with the heel of one of his boots until the sharpened end punctured the floorboard.
‘‘Now we can really begin sawing,’’ he proclaimed.
Jonny looked at his watch. There was only half an hour left—
hardly enough time to saw a hole large enough to allow a man to escape, but nothing was going to deter us now. We took turns.
Sawing, sawing, sawing, only stopping when the blade burned our hands. Finally we had a hole large enough to allow Jonny and two other men to rip out three planks. The rush of cold air catapulted our excitement. Everyone was smiling.
The train began to slow. We could hear the locomotive straining.
‘‘Here we are, boys. It’s time to jump,’’ Hypolite said as he wrapped his knees and elbows with strips torn from his blanket.
No one could argue his right to go first. Hypolite lowered himself slowly through the opening. I could hear his feet dragging on the cinders. He leaned on his elbows for a moment, then ducked 32
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his head through the hole. He was going to drop belly first. His hands released their hold. Hypolite was gone. We all wanted to rejoice, but was he a free man or did he get crushed under the wheels? We had no idea, but there were fifteen of us who wanted to find out. The others were too old, too sick, or too afraid.
One after another they dropped through the hole. Suddenly it was down to Jonny and me.
‘‘Go ahead, kid. I’ll be the last. The train could derail if I bounced,’’ he laughed, pushing me toward the opening.
I had already made up my mind to be the last one through that hole.
‘‘Go ahead, Jonny. I’m not a kid anymore.’’
‘‘I won’t hear of it. Go on, Pierre, we’re running out of time.’’
Something was holding me back. I kept thinking of what I had promised Stella when we walked down those stairs. I felt foolish. I wanted my freedom, but I didn’t want to break my promise. I didn’t want to abandon her. She was sitting in another car thinking of me, depending on me. At least that’s what I hoped.
‘‘Please, Jonny, I want to be the last one.’’
Jonny had lost his patience.
‘‘Have it your way.’’
He dropped his few possessions through the hole and began to lower himself. His bald head turned crimson as he struggled to squeeze his barrel-chested torso through. His boots hit the cinders.
That’s when I realized that the locomotive wasn’t panting and puffing anymore. The harsh, metallic grinding of the wheels left no doubt that our car had reached the curve.
‘‘Jonny, hurry up!’’
Nothing was visible except his powerful hands with those short, square fingers. When he let go there was a ripping sound. I threw myself down and looked through the hole. The back of Jonny’s tight-fitting leather jacket had snagged on a lantern hook and he was swinging from it like a puppet. He tried to release himself, but his arms couldn’t reach the hook. He thrashed about as if he were drowning in the ocean.
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‘‘What happened?’’ I heard someone ask.
‘‘He’s caught on something!’’
Jonny’s heavy body tipped, throwing his head inches from the track. I leaned out the hole. It was pitch black. The rattling and screeching of the steel wheels was deafening. The icy wind stung my face. My eyes watered and my nose began to burn as I fought to unhook him. I pulled with everything I had, but Jonny’s jacket held fast.
The train gathered speed. The cars banged together, then jolted apart, threatening to throw me out. I caught hold of Jonny’s legs. Someone grabbed an ankle. I took the other, but before we could hoist him up, his body gave a sharp jerk. Jonny shrieked, a cry of agony that faded into a guttural moan. I grabbed his twitch-ing legs. It was a strange and sickening sensation. I pulled with all the strength I had. Someone took hold of his trousers. His suspend-ers broke. From all directions hands reached out. His legs were in.
More hands came. Jonny’s jacket and shirt peeled over his head as we finally lifted his upper body through.
Everyone gathered around as we laid Jonny on the cold floor. I stripped off the bloody jacket and shirt that covered his face like a shroud. Once full of laughter, his blue eyes were now fixed and slightly protruding. A thin stream of blood trickled from a deep gash at the base of his skull and disappeared through a gap in the floor. Great brown clots formed in his ears. How did this happen?
Someone said that Jonny’s head must have struck a switching rail.
An old doctor from Toulouse bent over and examined the wound.
‘‘Nothing we can do,’’ he shook his head. ‘‘There’s a fracture at the base of his skull.’’
I knelt beside Jonny and carefully dabbed at the wound with his shirt. You’re strong, hold on. Fight. That’s what I wanted to say as his breathing became increasingly jerky and irregular, but I couldn’t utter a word. No one spoke. There were no poetic words or reassuring Bible passages that would give Jonny any solace as he endured the final strangulation of his life. His death rattle brought me to my 34
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feet. Consumed with grief and guilt, I let go of his bloody shirt and flopped down by the door.
The smoky kerosene lantern hanging from the ceiling swung in rhythm with the rails, throwing fantastic shadows on the walls. It cast a shifting yellow glow over Jonny’s slack face. When the light fell on the living, all I saw was dismay and bewilderment. Everyone had looked up to Jonny. I’m sure we all believed he was the one who could survive anything the Nazi had in store. I closed my eyes.
What had Jonny thought when I refused to go? Did he think I was afraid? Did he perceive it as misplaced politeness, or did he realize Stella was holding me back? His last look at me had been angry, but not scornful. I would have liked to ex
plain to him. I would have liked to ask his pardon, his forgiveness, but even if I had jumped, that hook would have still snagged him.
I opened my eyes. The train was now traveling at a dizzying speed. Wind howled through the hole, swirling straw and sawdust over Jonny’s body. I got up and closed the hole with the broken planks.
♦ ♦ ♦
I awoke with my heart racing. I had been dreaming that I was in the middle of a bombing raid. My body relaxed when I realized that the explosions were the train cars passing over a bridge. Painfully I stood up. The stink of unwashed bodies and excrement hung thick in the car. We had been riding for three days.
I went to one of the windows and opened my mouth wide, hoping that a little moisture might condense in it. Dark green clumps of pines enlivened the gray landscape speeding by. Here and there patches of snow clung to the hillsides. From the architecture of the houses and the onion-shaped steeples of the church towers in the distance I could tell we were heading into Poland. We had crossed through Germany, and that meant we weren’t being delivered to Dachau, Buchenwald, or Sachsenhausen. Where the hell were we going? What was in Poland other than Jewish ghettos? Maybe we PART I | DRANCY
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were going even farther. Could we be slave laborers meant for the Eastern Front? Looking at my fellow prisoners I thought, how could any of us survive a Russian winter?
When the train finally stopped at a station, every man, woman, and child in the cattle cars screamed for water. The Nazis hadn’t given us anything more to drink or eat. The bucket of water they put in our car in Bobigny had quickly been emptied. How could we have known that they wouldn’t refill it? We implored our guards, but to no avail. The civilians on the platform turned a blind eye except for one well-dressed gentleman who approached an adjoining car with a hot beverage. Before he could reach an outstretched arm, a guard slapped the cup out of his hand.
‘‘ Umdrehen, das sind Dreckjuden!’’ (Turn around, they’re dirty Jews!)