Audio Project
Born 1929 in
The
compassion of Jewish women
I was in
There was a
factory producing airplane spare parts. Later our group was assigned to work
there. I didn't work in this factory, but my friend did. The workers had to
stand at the machine for many long hours turning out a certain quota of parts.
The workers included German civilians, and prisoners Russians, Poles, Dutch and
perhaps other nationalities. They were in a separate camp, and we met only in
the factory.
At first I
worked in the Baukommando, the construction unit. Our
work consisted mainly of filling wheelbarrows with sand and hauling the loads
from place to place, under the vigilant supervision of SS women. We worked in
pairs one girl would fill up the wheelbarrow and the other would wheel it from
place to place. I was the youngest, and I had a hard time hauling the
wheelbarrow. My partner tried to make it easier for me by not filling our
wheelbarrow. The SS woman noticed. I don't remember if I got slapped, but we
were warned not to do it again. After that I had to haul full wheelbarows all over the place, and it was very hard for
me. After one day's work I fell sick. When work ended I came down with a high
fever and I was put in the infirmary. There was a Jewish woman doctor there, a
member of our group of prisoners. She took very good care of me, but it was a
long time before my fever went down. I was there nearly a month, and I was in
very weak condition.
From time to
time SS men came to check up on the patients. One day that doctor said to me:
"You shouldn't stay here. It's dangerous to be in a place like this too
long. The SS officer has been coming here too frequently, and I'm afraid
they're planning something." Shortly afterwards we were all called out to
a lineup, which the sick people also had to attend. One of the SS men demanded
10 women for work. The work was in the big kitchen of the factory, involving
peeling potatoes. That doctor recommended me for the job. There were about 15
of us. Much to our luck, the person in charge of the kitchen was a German
civilian, and we were not under the regular watch of the SS women. He and his
wife treated us very decently. The place was warm and I didn't go hungry. The
job I got thanks to that doctor saved my life, because my health had
deteriorated, and there I gradually came back to myself.
16. Aftermath of War- ie. Horrors of the
Holocaust, War crimes trials, Allied occupation
Characters:
American
Citizen – Kylie Abigail Madison
Jewish
Person – Tania Deutsche
Prison
(Camp) Guard – Gustov Schurmann
News
Reporter – Judith Harriett Eby
K.J.E.W.S. ~194.6 AM
Script:
Reporter: Hi, this is Judith Eby from KJEWS News.