Auschwitz remains stark after 60 years
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JOSEPH N. BELL
I suspect that all of us have a handful of places or events in our
lives that leave such an indelible impression that they are never
very far from our consciousness. One such place for me is the Nazi
death factory called Auschwitz.
It has been much on my mind this past week as both the print media
and television have been full of remembrances of this place on the
60th anniversary of its liberation by the Russian army. Although my
memories come from a visit long after the carnage that took place at
Auschwitz, they are nonetheless vivid.
Shortly after the Berlin Wall fell, my wife and I explored Eastern
Europe on our own. Not from tour buses, but rather from exhausted
nights in railway stations where we couldn’t read the signs or speak
the language. A major stop was Warsaw, where my wife’s ancestors once
lived. We were shocked to find that all that was left of the Warsaw
ghetto, where many thousands of Polish Jews had been herded, held
captive and, finally, massacred, was a plaque on a grassy knoll. Not
a single artifact, reproduction or piece of physical evidence remains
to serve as a gravestone for the victims who died there.
But not Auschwitz. It is much as the Germans left it 60 years ago.
We took a bus from Krakow -- a delightful river city that ironically
serves as the gateway to the horrors of Auschwitz -- enduring some 30
miles of garrulous talk in broken English from an anti-Semitic female
bus driver who dropped us off at the gates to the prison camp on a
lovely late summer day. There was a long, graveled walk to an arch
that marked the entrance. We got our first view of the interior of
the camp -- and were stopped dead in our tracks -- when we made a
sharp turn at the arch and saw a bevy of German soldiers in uniform,
many of them holding straining police dogs on tight leashes, standing
guard over dozens of prisoners in striped clothing.
That’s the scene deeply implanted in my memory. We found out
quickly that a movie was being shot there that day, but the
fictitious German guards became more and more real to me as we
explored the camp, and, by day’s end, I found myself unable to put
down a smoldering hatred of the actors playing the Nazi soldiers.
Auschwitz was a highly compact factory, designed with remarkable
efficiency to do its job: kill and dispose of an entire race of
people quickly, expeditiously and with the smallest possible
overhead. Genocide is usually messy. The Nazis reduced it to a
technological marvel of creative engineering. As this recognition
dawned, the cold, clinical ability to dehumanize millions of people
overwhelmed me, especially when I stood at the most devastating spot
in this chamber of horrors: the railroad siding where the cars
carrying the Jewish prisoners would come to a halt.
It was only a minute’s walk from the unloading platform to the
room, full of overhead showers, where most of the new arrivals were
sent to disrobe and supposedly be deloused. But instead of water, the
showers pumped out gas. Within a few minutes of arriving at this
railroad way station, the new prisoners were dead. What was about to
happen to them was so monstrous that the victims had no premonition
of their death. Neither did their loved ones who were cut off from
them by German officers sitting at a table, playing God, deciding
what prisoners might be useful to them, and temporarily extending
their lives before sending the rest down that brief walk to the
lethal showers.
I think of that railroad siding often these days, because it
speaks so eloquently to the ability of human beings to focus so
totally on ends -- which they have persuaded themselves are
necessary, whatever the cost -- that they blind themselves to the
means employed to achieve those ends.
Every element of Auschwitz that we saw shouts that message. There
were the vast, glassed-in exhibits of victims’ shoes and luggage --
one bag bearing the imprint of the fabled Anne Frank. The
crematorium, where the bodies were shoveled into furnaces that
reduced them to ashes. The gallows where the commandant of Auschwitz
was hung by the liberating army -- one life in exchange for more than
a million others in this death factory. The victims were mostly Jews,
but the Nazis also tried to rid their society of gypsies, political
opponents and homosexuals, the latter a choice that might be usefully
pondered today.
So might some of the things said by world leaders in the ceremony
at Auschwitz last week. Vice President Dick Cheney, for example, who
represented the United States, noted that the Holocaust took place
“in the heart of the civilized world” and added, “The story of the
camps shows that evil is real and must be called by its name and
confronted.” Good advice -- especially for people and nations with
great power who must be willing to look inside as well as outside for
manifestations of evil.
In a play called “Golda’s Balcony,” which just opened in Los
Angeles, the late Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir sums this up
powerfully when she asks, “What happens when idealism becomes power?
It kills. To save a world you create -- and this is a terrible
question -- how many worlds are you entitled to destroy?”
Like the veterans of World War II, the surviving victims of the
Nazi death camps will die off soon, leaving a clearer field for the
Neanderthals who would have us believe the Holocaust never happened.
That’s why these anniversary recognitions must continue. We need to
be reminded and to introduce new generations to the depths of evil to
which humankind can descend when the means are subverted totally to
the ends -- especially when the power is in the hands of allegedly
intelligent and sophisticated people. We will never have a better
example than the Holocaust.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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