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- Newsgroups: alt.revisionism,soc.history
- Subject: Holocaust Almanac: The Liberation of Buchenwald
- Message-ID: <1993Jan11.130103.15924@oneb.almanac.bc.ca>
- From: kmcvay@oneb.almanac.bc.ca (Ken Mcvay)
- Date: Mon, 11 Jan 93 13:01:03 GMT
- Followup-To: alt.revisionism
- Organization: The Old Frog's Almanac, Vancouver Island, CANADA
- Keywords: buchenwald
- Lines: 91
-
- [Speaking of the liberation of Buchenwald, and the death of the American
- president, Franklin Roosevelt, author Abram Sachar paints a surrealistic
- picture of an American officer, who requests the freed prisoners at
- Buchenwald to participate in a tribute/memorial to FDR...]
-
- "The moment was most confusing for the Polish Jews. The tribute to the
- President called up every reserve of remaining strength, but the plea for
- `understanding and reconciliation,' at such a point, left them bewhildered.
- Even as they attempted to raise their voices they must have remembered the
- day when a train had arrived at Buchenwald from Poland with only 300 living
- beings of the 4,000 who had been packed into the cars. Removing the
- corpses had been unusually laborious since most of the bodies had been
- frozen together; their arms and legs snapped off in the unloading.
-
- Some of the Hungarian prisoners must have remembered the 2,000 Hungarian
- girls aged between fifteen and twenty-five who had shared the miseries of
- camp life since the Budapest mass deportations of 1944. More than five
- hundred of them had been indentured as slave labor in the Krupp munitions
- works in neaby Essen. Their heads shaven, garbed in burlap sacks, housed in
- unheated barracks through the winter, set upon by dogs to prod them in
- their work, they had performed like robots until the intensive Allied
- bombardment began. They were forbidden access to the air-raid shelters and
- huddled together in terror in open trenches. The plants destroyed, Krupp
- officials herded the survivors into freight cars and returned them to
- Buchenwald, for the girls had been merely `on loan.' The German camp
- commandant could not accept them since he had already received thousands of
- other prisoners from camps also under fire. The girls were not even
- unloaded for bodily relief before being shipped on to dreded Bergen Belsen.
- On the parade ground now, it would have been understandable if the
- Hungarian prisoners let their attention lapse to wonder about the fate of
- these exhausted girls. [Some of the women survived Belsen to give testimony
- against the Krupps and the German armaments tycoons and their slave labor
- practices.]
-
- Half listening ... was a solitary Dutchman, Max Nabig, the last of hundreds
- of his countrymen who had been deported to Buchenwald. The others in the
- Nabig group had perished in the Mauthausen death camp. He, a Jew from
- Amsterdam, had been assigned to Dr. Hans Eysele, an SS `research' physician
- who needed human bodies on which to test reactions to pain during
- operations performed without anesthesia. Nabig had undergone stomach
- resection under such conditions. After the operation he escaped being
- discarded like a laboratory animal when a compassionate nurse substituted
- some benign substance for the usual lethal injection. Other prisoners had
- kept Nabig hidden and he lived to testify at the international trials <4>.
- Nabig's thoughts, as he stood in tribute to Roosevelt, have not been
- recorded. In his testimony, however, he implied that the American officer
- who conducted the memorial appeared to regard the whole war effort as a
- sports competition in which the winners, in a show of civilized chivalry,
- were to shake hands with the losers.
-
- Dr. Eysele was arrested when the camp was captured, stood trial, and was
- given the death penalty. But the sentence was commuted to an eight-year
- prison term, of which he served five. Released in 1952, the province of
- Bavaria loaned him, as a `homecomer,' 10,000 marks `for losses due to the
- war.' He practiced medicine for a time in Munich. He was about to be
- rearrested in 1955 when fresh evidence of many other inhuman experiments
- became available. Warned, perhaps by the police, he fled and was granted
- asylum in Nasser's Egypt, where he settled down to a lucrative practice in
- Cairo."
-
- <4> Kogon, Eugene. "The Theory and Practice of Hell: The Concentration
- Camps and the Theory Behind Them" pp. 28-29
-
- Extracted from---------------------------------------------------
- "THE REDEMPTION OF THE UNWANTED", Abram L. Sachar (New York: St.
- Martin's/Marek, 1983.
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- A recent copy of our Almanac Holocaust files may be obtained via anonymous
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-
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-
- For individual files, use the 'get' command, and the archive flag
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-
- Example: get holocaust <filename>
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-
- For a file list, try "index holocaust"
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