Béla Schwarcz
Anguish and Torture in German Hell
PREFACE
I am not a writer. Besides,
I am not writing this book to entertain people. In this writing I’d like to speak to those
people who were lucky to survive this horrible war without great suffering. I
am talking to them through my own dreadful torments described in this book. I am talking to them in the name of millions murdered.
And also in the name of those who managed to stay alive and accidentally escaped
from the hands of barbarian Gestapo and SS killers.
Through the painful suffering of the massacred people or those who were
liberated alive, I want to show that these barbarian killers do not deserve any
chance of mercy. More than that. Even a
death sentence would not be enough punishment for all these horrible crimes.
In the eyes of those who
suffered so much, the entire German nation is responsible, not just the
murderous, barbarian SS and Gestapo. I
want everyone to understand this, even if they do not share my opinion.
A year ago today, the German
marauding expedition totally collapsed.
A year and two weeks ago,
that is on April 23, 1945 (in poor health, between life and death) I escaped
from the German hell. On this anniversary, I decided to write briefly about the
suffering we experienced there.
Béla Schwarcz
Chapter 1
1938.
It was frigid cold in
December. The snow was just cracking under my feet. It was not even dawn yet,
when I arrived to the Consulate Office of the United States of America.
I was sure that I would
not be the first person there, but I would have never thought to see so many
people. A lot of people, not only under the gates and up to the stairs, but
also on the sidewalks, shivering in the cold. I also queued up at the end of
the line. After half an hour, the crowd doubled in size, so the crowd filled up
the section of Mór Perczel Street on the sidewalk entirely up to the Liberty
Square. A policeman tried to maintain order inside the gates. People were
talking about affidavit, quota and waiting list. A receptionist appeared at 9 o’clock sharp and asked all of those people who had a draft from the consulate to step
forward. Of course, only 4 or 5 people did so, in the crowd of hundreds, since only
a few had an invitation from the consulate for a visa hearing. The receptionist asked the rest of the crowd to
leave. But they did not move, they stayed put. Everybody wanted to get inside,
and ask something about their own immigration
case.
The consulate staff could not possible talk to
so many people, of course. They could not reassure us anyway, since the
Hungarian quota was set in four hundred or so (I do not know the exact number).
Naturally, first of all, husbands go to wives, and wives go to husbands. Then
parents go to their children. Children to parents. They have the priority. The
remaining slots go to siblings, relatives or friends. But of course, there are only
a few slots or even no slot left at all every year. Immigration was almost
impossible for those who were born in Hungary . But in order to give at least something to the
shivering, waiting crowd, the consulate receptionist distributed waiting list
forms to fill out. The crowd instantly snapped them up. Not everybody managed
to get a form. A sign on the door said with big letters that the Hungarian QUOT A was filled for 5 years ahead. It changed to 10 years within a week. It
changed to 20 years within a month. The waiting list grew very quickly as well
as the number of those thousands of people who wanted to leave their country,
their home, their village because they could not stand anymore the vile
politics of the Horthy regime.
I wanted to escape from my native land, Hungary , at all costs. I was not allowed to go to America . Therefore I tried to go to Belgium , since my parents and my younger brother lived in Antwerp . My father went to Belgium to look for a job in 1930. He had been working for four
long years in very hard circumstances in the ironworks in Charleroi . My mother and younger brother joined him in Belgium in 1935.
I was drafted to the Hungarian army at that time, in
1935. On January 1st, 1936 , I
had to report for military service in Nyírbátor, and then I was transferred for
boot camp training to a border patrol military unit, which belonged to the 12th
Infantry 2nd Battalion, in a village called Mérk located close to the Romanian
border. Ours was the 5th military unit. To tell the truth, the military training
method was quite barbarian. The corporal, the lance corporal and the military
trainer quite often hit my leg with the end of the rifle when we practiced how
to hold our rifles and how to make the turns. On Sundays instead of having the
afternoon off, we had to tighten our hips, bend our knees and hop around the
table like a frog with a soldier’s wooden chest in our hands. And when our
corporal got bored of this, he commanded us “to make an airplane”. I think
everybody who served in the Hungarian army knows very well what this expression
means. We hid under the bed. Then he commanded “Attention”. Of course, we were
not allowed to crawl out; we had to stand to attention with a bed. Of course,
the bed fell into pieces. I can’t say that my life was worse than my other friends’
lives that were in the army with me. I can’t even say that I had less trouble, since
the corporal made me clean his boots every evening and I made his bed every
morning. Otherwise, the corporal was quite an ugly person. He reminded me of
the German barbarism. His name was János Szilágyi. He was also the commander in
our room. I'd like to mention that one Sunday
afternoon Szilágyi started again his barbarian entertainment. He started giving
out commands, tighten your hips, bend your knees deep, and run around the table
with a soldier's wooden chest in your hand. There were twelve of us in that
group. All twelve of us were sweating. Later we could hardly breathe, when a
lad of Kispelecske collapsed. The corporal jumped to him and kicked him in the
groin where it is the most painful. The boy could not march, he lay in the sick
room because of this kick. He confessed to the doctor that the corporal kicked
him. By the time of the official hearing, the corporal threatened the boy well
enough that the boy denied that the corporal kicked him. At lunch time we often
had to eat our soup with a fork while squatting on the wooden chest.
In the fall, all married man and gypsies were
discharged. I was transferred along with a few others to Pest to the Ludovica Military
Academy, here I took care of the horses and served as an orderly. I was
transferred from the infantry to the mounted squad. Here I had to learn to ride
a horse and dust the horses out very well. Life was a bit easier here. The son
of the previous country-poisoning prime minister Gömbös was also there as an
officer cadet. Ferencz Szombathelyi, Colonel of General Staff was the Commander
of the Ludovica Military Academy at that time, and he was considered a good men
by many. I do not know if he melted into this plunderer, traitor Arrow
Cross gang later on. But as I remember him now, somehow I can't assume that he
did.
I was discharged on
September 23, 1937. I could not find any employment. I have to mention here that
some men left our garrison on Üllői
Street barefoot,
because they had no shoes. They were discharged empty handed.
I was running around in
the town for two weeks, when finally I got a job at a butcher in Király Street.
My salary was 12 pengos a week and some cold food to eat. Later, I learned that
my boss occassionally employed young country boys in the butcher shop, exploiting
them to complete exhaustion, from 6 in the morning until 10 in the evening. No lunch breaks. Just quickly grab
something to eat, then haul many heavy bags on bicycle to the big coffee houses.
Bring the meat in from the big truck all
by yourself. This butcher shop was always full. We sold a lot of meat, lard and cold cuts every single
day. But my boss, Károly Klein did not want to buy an electric grinder. I had
to grind all that meat by hand, when a consumer wanted to buy ground meat. Whenever
I stopped for a second, either my boss or his wife shouted at me: “Béla, don’t
you have anything to do?” If there would be a minute to rest by any chance,
then I had to go to scrub or find something else to do. The boss did not profit
anything from that work, because in the morning we cleaned everything well. Of
course, this heavy workload exhausted me, and I became very sick. I was in bed.
My boss gave me a 2-week notice, since he saw he couldn’t squeeze much more out
of me anymore. Later I learned that the much stronger, young country lads could
not keep up with this work pace longer than a few weeks.
When I got better, I found a job via newspaper ads as a
grocery clerk in the shop of József Berger at 16 Drégely Street . I have never worked as a grocery clerk. I could not
find any job in my trade, so I tricked him. I told him that I worked in my
father's grocery shop in the country before. Since I was not familiar with city
customs, I asked my boss to show me everything very well in advance, so I’d
know what to do. There was no lack of work at this place either. I had to get
up at 3
o'clock in the morning, so I
could arrive to the big food market in Csepel at 4 o'clock in the morning with the boss to buy fruits and
vegetables. Pack, deliver, and serve customers. I had no lunch break here
either. I can call this “from daybreak till nightfall”. But at least, it was
not a cruel exploitation like I had at my old job at Károly Kleisz Butcher at Király Street . I worked at this grocery shop for 6 months, then
their son came back home from the army, and the boss wanted to reduce my salary,
which was not too much to begin with for the work I did. I quit, because I was waiting for my visa to Belgium . My visa was due to arrive in any minute. I received
a non-extendable visa, valid for one month.
I said my farewells to my relatives and good friends on April 11, 1939 and left my native country, my land. I have to state
here that I did not left Hungary in order to find adventures on foreign land. I left
the country because I was fed up with Horthy regime, the religious exclusions
and the huge unemployment. The terrible exploitation of the working people. You
could not say or do anything. The Horthy regime took care of it; the smallest protest
in the name of the truth was enough for them to call you a “communist”. Either
you were a communist, or not, you would not see the daylight anytime soon.
Let me mention here the cruel and inhuman oppression of
the agricultural laborers and farmhands by the rich landowners. My dear native village is Kisszekeres in Szatmár County . I happened to be there a lot. My uncle was a steward of the Hajnau Estate,
his boss was Dezső Fried, later on Sámuel Schwarcz became
a tenant of the estate. Most agricultural laborers had enough bread to eat only
for two weeks and they were starving for the other two weeks, or they ate only
some potatoes or other kind of vegetables. Of course it depended on the number
of their children. If someone had no children, he could eat bread for the whole
month. Clothing was very scarce. Farmhands worked from dawn to nightfall, and
almost for free. The salary was 12 metric
center doubles, which contained half wheat and half refuse of wheat, 2 cartload
of firewood, 1 piece of stump (which of course, does not burn well), few
kilograms of salt, few kilograms of beans, corn or hemp, a tiny piece of land,
usually in a barren area. Very few people had a cow or a pig. The annual salary
was 8, 16, or 24 pengos. A 24-pengo salary was offered only those who were working
at the same place for years and years. Where were the spices, clothing or
lighting? If someone had a hen, he did not allow himself to eat even one egg
accidentally, because he had to take it to the store to exchange it for a
little salt or vinegar or petrol. Literally, lice ate them. Once I peeked through the window of a farmhand,
his name was Kicsker. He had a table and a bed with little straw on it, nothing
else. Only a few kids loafed about in the school, because kids did not have
boots. In one hand, the children did not
mind this at all, since their teacher Endre Végh hit their ear a lot and beat
them if he had a rough time in his love affairs. “Whipping bench” meant that
you had to bend down your head to a bench, the kid sitting on the bench held
your head, and the teacher hit your bottom with a cane. I know this well,
because I was also on the whipping bench occasionally, my palm was also swollen
from cane marks. I’d like to mention here a widowed maidservant, her name was
Apátiné. She ran to my aunt and complained in tears that the deputy notary took
all her hens (she had 4) because her son, little Jani did not report to a
military youth group called “levente”.
My poor uncle was a man who shouted a lot, but the farmhands liked him
very much. He was like a good soldier, if a supervisor came by, he shouted, and
when the supervisor was not there, he left everything as it was. My poor uncle and
his family died in Auswitz. Only one of his daughters is alive, Erzsike, who
lives now in Fehérgyarmat, and she is the wife of Jenő Farkas. The Haynau Estate was an infamous place. It was given
to Haynau, the cruel hanging judge for executing the leaders of the 1849
uprising. That era was very similar to the barbarian fascism which just ended
now.
When my train moved out of the Eastern Main Railway
Station, I wanted to cry. I did not speak any other language, just Hungarian. I
knew my situation would be difficult abroad. I asked the ticket inspector
whether the German ticket inspectors spoke Hungarian, too. He assured me that
they did. A Hungarian officer jumped on the train at our border town,
Hegyeshalom, and asked me whether I had any money. I showed him the cash I had
on me, 3 pengos. A minute later they asked for my passport in German, and I was
horrified as I saw a German swastika stamped in my passport. The German officer
started to shout. Later I learned that he said that all Jews should speak
German, and he did not believe that I could not speak German. His appearance
reminded me of the sadist, barbarian, parasitical SS men in the death camps.
Early in the morning, our train arrived to Vienna . German soldiers patrolled the train station. I wanted
to see into people's heart to know how the Austrians dealt with this barbarian
German occupation. After waiting for an hour, I boarded a train to Ostende.
There were German soldiers everywhere. During my entire trip, the train was
stuffed with soldiers wearing swastikas. I could see the German nation totally
gave in to Hitler. From the train, we saw swastikas displayed on huge boards on
the fields, everywhere. The German farmers gave a present to Fuhrer by erecting
a board with huge swastika on it on the fields. You could see then the Furher was
alive. Soldiers and soldiers were everywhere. You did not have to be a smart politician;
even a small child could see that this nation was preparing to conquer other
nations and countries.
Finally, I happily arrived to the Belgian zone, and I did
not see the abhorred Germans anymore. My unforgettable, dear father, whom I had
not seen for 9 years, waited for me in Brussels . He worked at
a cleaning facility at that time. My mother waited for me in Antwerp at the train station. The moment when I arrived and
jumped into her arms after so many years apart is burned into my memory. I was happy to be with my parents and my
younger brother. But the Belgian authorities did not let me enjoy the company
of my family, and after staying in Belgium for a month, I was expelled from Belgium because of my Hungarian citizenship. I did not go
home, of course. I went to Brussels .
Later my parents also moved to Brussels , and it was much better for me, I could go visit
them time to time.
From May to September, I lived sleeping here or there,
since I had no residence card. They did not give residence cards to
Hungarians. In October, the war was in
the air. The Nazi gang occupied Poland . Here, in Belgium , a new regulation required all foreigners without
papers to register at the police station. Worriedly I registered at the police
too, and I got a permit to stay for a month. After 2 months, they gave out residence
permits, Modelle B white cards valid for 6 months.
During that winter, I lived with my dear parents. It
appeared then that we could live a bit calmer life. But unfortunately a big peril
fell upon us. In May 1940 the German murderous storm besieged Belgium . Inhabitants took a flight. The lucky ones reached England . The German bandits were shooting at the fugitives with
machine guns from airplanes. Many people lost their lives, and there were crippled
ones, who lost a leg or other body part while trying to escape.
The Germans executed their actions with cunning and
crafty cruelty, indeed. How cunning they were! During the first 2 years of the
occupation, they did not do anything in particular; they let the Jews live and
trade. Therefore even those people, who left the country, slowly started to
come back, and began to work. From 1940
to 1942, here in Belgium no apparent atrocities happened beside a few arrests, and the Antwerp temple fire which was set by youngsters who also
threw out the Torah. The murderous Germans acted this way so they could pounce
down all Jews at once. Unfortunately,
they did execute their plan.
I’ll describe here
what kind of regulations were made by them, how skillfully they were preparing
to kill millions. First they ordered all Jews by law to register as a Jew in a
Belgian Registry Office. They made an entry about the Jewish person and they
printed “JOUD. JVIVE” on his/her identity card. My identity card was taken by
the Gestapo when I was arrested, but later, after our liberation, my identity
card was found in the Mechlen transit camp along with
the identity papers of other wretched prisoners. It is shown on the other page.
Another new German law granted permission to organize and operate a Jewish
Committee in order to facilitate the removal the Jews. Every Jewish person had
to sign up. I am attaching the sign-up document of my sweet sister-in-law, who
never came back home. This traitor committee accepted 10 francs at sign-up from
each Jewish person. Of course, these unlucky people (hundred thousands of them)
did not know this registration meant death for them. After registration, the
Germans’ ordered the Jewish Committee to send out letters to the registered
members and instructed for work for the Germans. There was no mention of
deportation. If someone needed a blanket or anything else, the above named
office would provide it. If someone did not report for work, they would turn
the person over to the Germans. Of course, thousands reported for work, and
they were sent to gas chambers and crematories. Many of them reported for work
after receiving these letters, having no idea about their fate.
But later, a small remaining Jewish community got a wind
of this happening; news leaking out of Poland gave us cause to doubt the Germans. And the small
remaining Belgian Jewish community scattered. However, safety was nowhere to be
found. Gestapo agents patrolled everywhere. Substantial sums were paid for each
Jew; a lot of Jews were turned in by their neighbors. If someone noticed a
Jewish face on the street, he followed the person from a safe distance to see
which building he/she was going in, then called up the Gestapo with the
address. The grey taxi appeared in no time for the unlucky ones. A Polish man named
Zsák was also a refugee, but he became a traitor. He accompanied the Gestapo
agents, and constantly searched for Jews. He could recognize a Jewish face on
the street at once, and that person was immediately sentenced to death. Even if
he had fake papers, Zsák did not let that person go. He ordered him to remove
his pants, and then took him to the basement in the Gestapo building. If Zsák
found a Hungarian Jew, who was defending himself that he was a Hungarian (Jews were not deported yet from Hungary),
Zsák replied in Hungarian using the most repulsive words stating that he had to
go with him. This criminal knew a few words in Hungarian. This despicable
quisling sent many people to death. Nobody knows what happened to him.
According to some people, when the Gestapo agents marched out of the country,
they killed him. Some say he escaped. The fact is, that a few days before the
English and American soldiers liberated Belgium , he was still seen there hunting Jewish people.
October, 1943.
The Germans suffered huge losses everywhere. The Russians
pushed forward all the time. Many talked about the end of the war. If I meet
another persecuted person emerging from a hiding place on the street by any
chance, we’d recognize each other. We are pale.
Our nerves are all frizzled. Out of fear we do not wear our yellow stars
anymore. We know it does not matter anymore. They take us either way. Everyday
another friend of mine was taken. As
they say in Hungarian, “the clock struck”. However, we are trying to comfort
each other saying that this can’t last much longer. We are waiting for the long
overdue English-American invasion. What is going to happen??? The most
unbearable thing is that there are so many traitors. We can’t go out of the
house anymore. We don’t want to stay in the old place. I go to an apartment in
6 Rue Plantain, and my parents go to house number 34 on the same street, searching
for a new hiding place. We moved to this house, but we stayed only for a few
days there. My poor, dear, unforgettable and good mother was very afraid that we
might be taken from this new hiding place even sooner. Streets and walls were
strange; we became even more scared staying there. As always, we followed my
poor mother's advice, and we finally returned to our old apartment.
Only a few days later, during the night of April 22, 1943 , I woke up to the sound of the murderers banging on our
door. I said to my wife, “this is the end. The Gestapo is here”. There was no
way or time to escape. Trembling and
shaking, I opened the door. The killer barbarian bandits, civilians and Gestapo
agents together shone a sharp light into my face. My wife was dead pale, and I
saw that we had come to the end. They
started shouting at me to identify myself. I presented my identification card;
they saw at once that I was Jewish. They started to search for our names on the
paper they carried with them. Someone gave us up. Who was it? Maybe a neighbor
or someone else. The SS soldier barked at us to pack our things fast because we
had to go with them. We never harmed a fly, but we had to go because we were
Jewish. I asked the reason of our arrest. Then the civilian Gestapo agent
grabbed his pistol and roared,”get ready”. I am telling my wife, who is still shaking,
that it is time for us to go where her
siblings and others went before... We are packing now, trembling...
(I have to put down my pen. I am so upset that I can't
continue for a while. I see all the pain and suffering in front of my eyes.)
Horrors!!!!! I stopped
writing 5 weeks ago. I’d like to
continue but I am not able to do so. I have no nerves to continue.
One civilian Gestapo agent stays with us, the others go
away. The Gestapo agent sits down, watches us as we are packing. Then he says
we better hurry up, otherwise we have to go without luggage. We grab things
fast, still shaking. We do not know what to take with us, which clothes…
(I quit, I can't continue writing)
Germany .
Germans were pushed out of France
and Belgium ,
and from other Western countries. Forces advanced in order to occupy Germany .
Everybody was talking about the end of war. It seemed to be near. Few prisoners
in Barrack 22 had German, Christian wives, who lived free in Germany .
They sent newspapers to their husbands. We learned from those newspapers what
was happening in the world. The Germans did not write the truth. But between
the lines you could figure out what was going on, where the war was heading.
One of these prisoners, whose wife lived free, asked his wife in a letter to
send him some clothes. Maybe to put something on when we would be free again
after the war has ended. But the SS guard told him, "Do not think a minute
that you will ever go home from here." Time went by. We still had to work.
But the work was pretty useless by then. We had to do it anyway. The prisoners
suffered, died, and they were burned in the crematorium. Some prisoners were
transported to other camps, some people were sent to Auschwitz .
There was a man with his young son, who spoke French very well. His wife was in
Ravensbruck, and she survived the war. He and his young son came with us from Belgium . I
remember him; he was a very good man. His name was Ganzo, and his son's name
was Albert. Maybe such a young person had a little bit better life then we did.
There was fresh air. They were growing. But one day his father told me between
tears in French that Albert died. We felt so sorry for him. He
and his father were swallowed by death, they never went home. I think they were
Turkish Jews. The construction work continued. At the bricklayer site my father
cleaned the cement between the bricks with an iron. He did it so nicely; you
could tell which row was his work. Once we had to pick up broken glasses and
other trash from the bombed out area facing the road. And then an SS unit marched
singing to the military barracks. They were singing in Hungarian. One, two,
one, two... they marched. I knew that song by heart at once.
BOOK 2
I am already seventy-three years old. I think it is time
to write my memoir. I have enough material to write about, actually a lot. I
went through two world wars in my life. True, I was a small child at the time
of World War I.
I was born on July 18th, 1913 . After World War I, antisemitism was already strong
in Hungary . We lived in that part of the country which was very
poor, with a few exceptions. We lived in Vámosoroszi in Szatmár County until I was seven or eight years old. A lot of poor people lived there.
Small landholders also lived there, and two big landowners too, one of them was
called Stózinger, and the other's name was Kristóf. Wide marsh stretched
between two streets of the village. There were willow trees and small bridges.
The marsh often overflowed. At those times we could cross the street with punts
or walk on wooden planks that people screwed together and put down on the
water. Unhealthy weeds and grasses grew along the marsh. Bad odors rose from
the swamp. It was unhealthy. Youngsters were infected by tuberculosis and died
in a young age. There were more than enough funerals in the village. Pastor Márton
Incédi was busy attending burials. The marsh was drained later. A river was dug
out for the water to flow in, and it flows there ever since. Our unhealthy
swamp disappeared, and the high death rate was almost gone.
In 1921 or 1922, we moved to Kisszekeres, another village
nearby. We lived there until the end of the twenties. Then we moved to
Fehérgyarmat. We lived in difficult circumstances. There was a big jesiva, a
Jewish school in Fehérgyarmat, with a lot of students. The jesiva’s leader was
Rabbi Vilmos Güncler. Some opinions were heard by then, that sidewalks were
already too full of Jews and Jewish agents. Our life was hard. In the early
thirties my father went to Belgium to look for a job. I worked at a kosher butcher shop
in Gyarmat. I was greatly exploited. They began to shave off bócher’s, young
Jewish lad’s ringlet at paramilitary youth organization called levente. Fascism
became increasingly stronger in Germany . The strong hate against Jews could be felt more and
more in Hungary also.
I was drafted to the military in January of 1936. By
then, my poor mother and my younger brother lived in Belgium . I reported for military service at Mérk, a village
near the Romanian border. This boot camp was one cruel, inhuman torture. I stayed
there until September 1936. Some people were discharged, some were distributed.
I was transferred to Budapest to the Ludovica Military Academy , to serve at a military
mounted unit. My job was to take care of the horses and serve young men
studying to be military officers. We, I and other transferred lads, were
enlisted men. We became cavalry men. In Mérk, I served as an infantry man. At
Ludovica Military Academy I was the only Jew. Let me write here about an ethnic
German farrier sergeant. He did everything in his power to make sure it would
be me who had to lift up the legs of the most nervous horses while we put
horseshoes on the horses. He was praying for the moment when a wilder horse might
kick me to death. Anti Nagy was transferred there from another military garrison.
He was cleaning his two horses just across from me. I was cleaning my horses, and
he was cleaning his horses. He always passed anti-semitic remarks in my
presence. This time he said, "Jews took blood at Tiszaeszlár". I became agitated, jumped at him and started to hit him
with a horse scraper. Of course, he began to shout and gave out a high shrill.
The farrier sergant stopped by the door and asked, "What is going on here?" I approached him like a soldier, then I repeated him Anti Nagy’s
words, "He says, the Jews killed a girl in Tiszaeszlár and took her blood".
Because Anti Nagy said such a big lie, I had to beat him up. Then the sergeant
replied, "He is right."
Something just broke inside me. I realized then, that it
did not matter that I was a Hungarian soldier; I would always be a Jew, a displaced
person, and people would hate me. After this incident I did not clean the
horses so faithfully anymore, I did not pick horse dung from the floor at
night. Often I had to watch the horses at night.
Then, I was discharged in September 1937. There were no jobs
available. I worked for a miniscule amount of money at a butcher shop, but not
for a long time, maybe 2 1/2 or 3 months. After that, I got a job at a grocery
store on Drégely
Street as a
shop assistant. Here, I met young people who were members of the Hungarian Nazi
Arrow Cross Party. This was in the first half of 1938. They greeted each other
with raised hand, fascist style. During my next job, I was a bread delivery boy.
It was a very hard work. Later, I delivered corn and other stuff from a big
crop trader to several small stores. After this, I became an errand boy in a
paint shop. One evening I sat at a small dining room and I was listening to the
radio. Prime Minister Béla Imrédi was talking about politics and the Hungarian
problem. Finally he said, "And now I am going to speak about the Jewish
issue, which is like a tumor. It needs to be cut out of the body of the Hungarian
nation." He got a big applause.
When I could not get any more jobs, I went down to
Kisszekeres. My aunt lived there with my uncle and their seven children. My
uncle was a steward of an estate. From his entire family, only one girl
returned home, everybody else perished in concentration camps. This niece of
mine now lives in Israel . She is 73 years old, and her name is Erzsike.
In 1938, I traveled back to Budapest . By then I got a document, an affidavit from my
uncle and aunt, inviting me to come to America . The American consul notified me that the Hungarian
quota was already full for years to come, so I had no chance to go to America . Only those had a chance, people who went to see their
spouses, or children going to visit their parents, or older parents going to visit
their American citizen children. I registered, but I did not get a visa. I was
in a difficult situation again in Pest . I worked at a
butcher shop for a short time at Király Street . My boss was called Károly Klein. During the spring
time the Jewish Council called me to Síp Street , and they told me that I might immigrate to South America , since I was already registered. I replied that I
had just received my visa to Belgium to live with my parents and my younger brother. This
turned out to be a very bad choice. If I went to South America I would have escaped from German concentration camps.
Maybe I could have saved my poor parents as well. But I decided to apply for a
Belgian visa. I was told that I could get a visa for 3 months. I had no valid passport
by then. My passport expired. I tried to get a new passport at the Passport
Department of the Police Headquarters, but they did not even want to hear about
me. They advised me to wait for a new decree from the Department of Interior
Affairs. A few days later, I went back to the Police Headquarters to the
Passport Office. An older police officer stood at the entrance gate. I looked
at him, and I recognized him at once. He recognized me, too. I said Uncle Huszár, he said Béla
Schwartz. We knew each other very well from the Military Hospital on Gyáli
Street. During my military service, I had problems with my stomach and I was
sent to this hospital for examination. One day this Uncle Huszár, who was a
police officer, arrived to our hospital room in bad condition. He had a lung
infection. His bed was close to mine, and I helped him a lot. He saw my
kindness and he always asked me to get him this or that, or help him to get off
the bed or go back to bed. And now, we met again accidentally. We were very
glad to see each other again. He asked me about my life, what I was doing
there. I told him that I wanted to get an exit permit so I could go to Belgium.
His advice was to find a certain military officer, a captain at the Police
Headquarters, who was willing to secure short term exit permits for discharged
soldiers. He told me to find this captain. He also warned me to behave very
much like a soldier, otherwise this captain would refuse to help me. I thanked
for his advice, and went up to this captain’s
office at once. I knocked on the door. Someone said inside, "Come
in". I opened the door. I stood attention as a soldier in front of the
officer and with a very loud voice I said, "Captain, Béla Schwartz,
reservist infantry man, I hereby humbly ask for a three month leave to visit my
parents in Belgium." The officer watched
me intently, then took his seal and stamped a three-month exit permit in my passport.
By that time, I had a one-month extension in my expired passport with an
additional clause that on my way back my passport should be confiscated since
my citizenship is not clarified yet. Never mind that all my ancestors were born
in Hungary.
Then I purchased a ticket to Belgium , and in April 1939, I boarded the train. My passport
was examined at the German-Austrian border. The German officer, who examined
the passports, asked me, "How much money do you have?" Well, I did
not have much money. He asked, "What is it in there in that glass jar in
your luggage?" I told him, "Coffee". He asked, "Kind of
brewed coffee?" I said yes, although I did not understand too much German then.
He asked, "How come you do not speak German? All Jews speak German."
Previously, when we crossed the Hungarian border at Hegyeshalom, I exchanged
all my money at the Hungarian border patrol to German money. Then our train
started to leave the station and went all the way to Wien. I had to get off the
train there and wait for the Ostend train. Austria was annexed to Germany at that time. German soldiers in boots and iron
helmets were walking at Wien Grand Railway Station. After an hour, the Ostend train finally arrived and I boarded the train along
with other passengers. We waited a little, then our train left the railway station.
Many soldiers were traveling on the train. Two uniformed soldiers stood with
swastikas at the window. They looked out of the window. At one station, beer
was sold. I wanted to buy a bottle of beer, so I went to the window. I looked at
my German money, but I did not know how much it was. The arm banded German turned
to me and helped me to buy a small bottle of beer. He probably did not notice
that I was a Jew. I did not realize then how dangerous it was for me to travel
among these Nazis on the train. We traveled on the train for a day or two, and
finally we approached the Belgian border. The train stopped at Achen. I saw that
one man was taken off the train. The Germans stamped my passport, the Belgian
supervising officers boarded on the train and stamped it again. The train
started to leave the border station, and then went all the way to Brussels . I had to change train there to go to Antwerpen.
When I got off at Brussels , my poor father was waiting for me. We greeted each
other and kissed each other. His first words were, “See, my son, how grey-haired I became." Then we waited for the train to Antwerp, which arrived
shortly. We boarded the train and soon we arrived to Antwerp. As we got off the
train, I saw my poor mother who was waiting for me. She looked fragile,
hardships of her life broke her. We kissed each other. She asked about me, then
we went home to Magdalena Street. Józsi, my younger brother also came home to
meet me. We were so glad to see each other. He was a young guy then, barely 18
years old. He was trained to be a taylor. The next day, my father and I went to
the Police to register. We had to wait for a long time at the police station,
our number was two. But every time the officer called two in Flemish, he asked
some one else to come in. The officer asked my father whether he spoke Flemish
or French. My father told him he could speak a little bit French. He worked in
Charleroi ironworks at the time he was alone abroad. My mother and younger
brother still lived in Hungary, in Fehérgyarmat at that time. French was spoken
in that Belgian town. So after a lot of talks, I received a paper valid for
one-month stay. This paper warned me that I had to leave Belgium after one
month. This month went by very fast. My poor father went up to Brussels every
day. He worked in a used cloth factory. The factory owner was a rich man. He
bought a lot of used men suits and trousers. He had them mended on sewing
machines, had put ugly patches on the clothing. In Europe, nobody would wear this
clothing. Still it was good business for him. His name was Veiman. Cleaners and
steamstresses worked for him. My poor father worked as a cleaner. He shipped all
cleaned, patched up clothing to Belgian Congo for the black population. At that
time Congo belonged to Belgium. It was called Belgian Congo. Now it is called
Zaire. It does not belong to Belgium anymore. People must have been very poor
there if they wore those clothes.
My one-month permit was
about to expire. I did not want to go back to Hungary. My home country drew
closer gradually to German fascism. What could I do? I did not dare to stay in our home at Antwerp . I was afraid that the police would deport me. I traveled
to Brussels by train, and slept at remote relatives’ homes.
Later my parents moved to Brussels ,
and I stayed in their home. At a Brussels flee market we bought cheap men’s clothing, and we
mended and cleaned them at home. Veiman bought them from us at a pretty cheap
price. That’s how we supported ourselves. We also sewed linings into woman’s
purses. The purse and bag manufacturers bought it from us after they could not
buy new linings. Once I was at Veiman’s used cloth factory, and then I heard on
the radio as they announced, Germany started the war. The Germans attacked Poland , and they were already bombing Warsaw . We all got really scared. What would happen to the
Jewish community in Poland ? As soon as the Germans occupied Poland , they began to exterminate the Jews. In Belgium , the mood was sour. Wealthy people ran away to
wherever they could- some to Switzerland , some to England . Very few people could find refuge in these
countries. The lucky ones, within the quota, went to America . I also wanted to come here, but I could not get a
visa. I had been registered for an entry visa for two years already. The
American Consulate confirmed that I had to wait even longer, possibly for a
long time, because the Hungarian quota was tiny. I had no papers or IDs. I was
afraid all the time that the police would catch me and take me to the border, and
I would be deported. I did not have a residence permit.
In May 1940, Germany started a war against Belgium , Netherlands and France . People were running, fleeing. Chaos prevailed. We
went up to the Hungarian Consulate and asked them, “What is going to happen to
us now?” A Consulate Associate was standing at the door, and he told us, “You,
Hungarians have no reason to be afraid.” He was so wrong. Some people reached England traveling along the withdrawing British troops, and they
were saved. The Germans forged ahead and bombed the country. The Belgians blew
up the bridges. The king of Belgium surrendered. The German army occupied the city of Brussels on motorcycles, followed by military trucks and other
type of military personnel. Streets were deserted. It seems that at that time I
did not fully understood this dreadful tragedy, because I went out to the
street and watched the marching German army. Later in the evening, I walked along
the empty main street to the Grand Railway Station, the Garde Nord. On the way
back, I seemed to be lost, so I asked a Belgian man. The man was surprised, but
he gave me the directions. Probably he took me for a civilian German. Around
sunset, about 15-20 German soldiers stood in front of a house, talking. They looked
at me. They could have killed me if they found out that I was a Jew. Soon after
this, we went up to the Hungarian Consulate again. We were advised to find a
place, settle down, that we won’t be harmed at all. Meanwhile Germany flanked the Maginot line and attacked France and Netherlands . At the beginning, Germany did not hurt the Jews. We could work. A lot of
refuges returned and found jobs. When Paris capitulated, Hitler made his appearance in Paris , too. He was so happy, he started dancing. Jewish
shops remained open at first, but they had to display a sign in the shop window
saying in German that this was a Jewish property (Judishe unternemung). The
Nazis began to issue several anti-Jewish laws. Radios were confiscated. Trade licenses
(issued earlier by Belgians) were invalidated. Curfew was in effect after 7 pm . The Germans knew they could do whatever they wanted
with the Jews, because the Jews were displaced people, they did not have a
country of their own. The Germans ordered all Jews to register. Every Jewish person
had to register at Belgian City Hall . Registration was done by the Belgians; they stamped
the words JUDE-JWIF into our ID cards. There was a Jewish Council, a Jewish authority
in Brussels . For the outsiders, they seemed to help the Jewish
cause, all Council members were Jews. It was also a great trick. This Jewish Council
(Judenrat) received orders from the Germans about what to do with the Jewish
people. They registered all Jews, so the Germans knew about every Jew. They
received an order from the Germans to make a yellow star for every Jew. We had
to sew this on our clothing on the left chest. The Germans occupied a large
empty military garrison in the city of Malin , planning ahead that they would collect all Jews
there and later transport them into death camps. And that’s exactly what
happened. Everything was planned ahead, one decree after another. The deportation
process also began with a trick. The Jewish Council printed out some notices.
Of course, following the German instructions. These notices announced that Jews
had to report for work. Young Jewish boys delivered these notices to Jewish
addresses, and dropped them into their mailboxes. Of course, those people, who
reported for work, were deported to concentration camps. At that time, when I sewed
my yellow star on my chest, it was already very dangerous for a Jew to go
outside of his home. When the Germans saw a Jew with a yellow star, they
arrested him at once and took him to the basement of the Gestapo building. They
kept him there for a few days, until a sufficient number of Jews were gathered
in the basement, and then they transported them into a military garrison. Huge
transports went from there to Auschwitz and other concentration camps. We heard about what
was happening with the captured Jews, but we could not sincerely believe such enormous
mercilessness and viciousness could ever take place. Such evil, atrocious mass
murders, incomprehensible by human brain, were never committed against people
by people since the universe existed. We were dumbfounded. This was beyond
description, to take millions into gas chambers to kill and burn. Mothers, with
little children and babies. Horrors! The worst of it, is that it happened in
our lifetime; in the lifetime of our generation. Here, I have to pause and ask
myself, how could it all happen? Who is responsible? Who is guilty? What did
we, Jewish people, do so wrong, that we let all these things happen to us? It
seems that any minority among other people is always in danger. If the Jewish
people would have their own country, a strong and independent state, then none
of this could have happened to us. Therefore now every Jew is responsible for
helping the state of Israel in all accounts, so such a horrible tragedy against
the Jews could never happen again.
I mentioned that we lived in Belgium during the German occupation. Life became harder and
harder for the Jewish people. Livelihood was difficult. Great fear ruled. At
the beginning, Hungarian Jews were not deported. The Jews walked free in Hungary , too. They tortured those Jewish people who were reported
to the authorities or were taken away to forced labor camps. There were only a
very few exceptions, just a few humane officers who remained humans in
inhumanity. Somebody said, "It would be the wisest thing to take a couple
hundred forced laborer Jews home in a briefcase." You got to understand
that what they meant- to take home only the names, and exterminate people. In Belgium , where we lived, Germans issued new anti-Jewish laws
all the time. According to the new law, a letter from the Hungarian Consulate did
not protect a Hungarian Jew anymore, nor other Jews from other countries which
were friendly with Germany , because the Germans issued a law stating that if a
country wanted to protect its Jewish citizens, that country should transport
these Jews back home from Belgium . These German-friendly countries let very few Jews return
to their home country. Even if there were few people who could go home to Hungary , what happened to them? We know what their destiny was
after the Germans occupied Hungary . I had submitted a request in 1936 or 1937 when I
was a soldier. They asked me to come to Brussels to the Hungarian Embassy once. Cunningly they did
not mention in their letter why they wanted me to go to Brussels , only that I had to bring my ID. The Consulate
Secretary informed me at once seeing my ID, that I could not go home because I
was married. The Department of Interior Affairs replied that I could go home
only if I was single. I was married in July 1942, shortly after that we had to
sew on our yellow star. Then came the horrible tragedy. The Germans pounced on
the Jewish houses at night in Brussels in Anderlecht District. They chased down the Jews
onto the streets, put them on freight trains. They took them straight to gas
chambers in Auschwitz . My poor brother-in-law, Kálmán was also arrested
then, but he jumped out of the wagon and escaped. Later the Gestapo caught him,
and unfortunately his young life ended in Auschwitz . We managed to escape then only because the Germans did not come to our
small street named Rue Planten.
Hitler believed his army to be unstoppable. He attacked Russia . He occupied Ukraine , and went ahead all the way to Stalingrad . There the German Army came to a sudden stop, and then the Russians
started to push the Germans back slowly. The only problem was that this
push-back was very slow. The Germans took revenge on the Jews. The Secret
Police and the Gestapo searched for hiding Jews as if this would have solved
the war problems. The atrocities were enlarged by the fact that there were
people willing to report the hiding Jewish people to the Gestapo. The Gestapo savages
went to collect these Jews at nighttime; they loudly banged their doors with
rifle butts. I heard the Nazis even paid money for each reported Jew. The
unfortunate Jews did not know what to do, wherever they went, wherever they
worked, they were frightened that the Nazi Gestapo would catch them. The
Gestapo was looking for hiding Jews all the time. Sometimes they broke down the
doors of Jewish homes at daytime, but they did it mostly at night, hitting the
doors with riffle butts.
My two sister-in-laws got a small job in Scharbeck
District in Brussels . They had to mend mattresses. The Nazi savages broke down the door on them
at daytime. Someone must have reported them. Olga, my younger sister-in-law was
heavily pregnant, maybe 8 or 9 month pregnant. The Nazi savages decided that instead
of the pregnant Olga, they would take Rózsi, my other sister-in-law. Poor Rózsi
got very scared, as I heard, the Nazis hit them. Then she said, "Leave me alone. I have children." Then the Nazis asked her, "Where are your
children?" Rózsi realized what might happen if she tells them where her children were
hiding along with other Jewish children. So she did not tell them where her
children were. The Nazis started to beat her. She ran to the window and jumped
out of the window. I think they were on the third floor. She broke her bones
badly and lost her consciousness. People came rushing together. Kálmán, my poor
brother-in-law was closeby and he saw this disaster. He started to cry stroking
Rózsi’s hand. No one knew that he was
her brother. The Nazi murderers at that moment did not know what to do next.
They allowed Rózsi to go to the hospital, and told her doctor to notify them
when she gets better in order to take her away, along with the other Jews. Even
if they allowed for Olga to get away earlier, now they decided to take with
them my poor heavily pregnant sister-in-law. She probably died in the Auschwitz
crematorium, or maybe she was killed even beforehand, as her delivery date drew
closer. We went to visit my poor sister-in-law, Rózsi in the Scharbeck
Hospital, her leg and arm bones were broken. The Gestapo came also to check
whether she was ready to go with them. When she recuperated a little, she
escaped from the hospital. I heard later that her doctor was taken away because
he did not collaborate with the Germans in Rózsi’s deportation. With great difficulties, she, her husband, Dezső and their children
survived the bloody war in Brussels ; they were liberated in
Belgium . Poor Rózsi passed away
in Israel a few years ago. Dezső, her husband died a few months before her. She
often had serious nervous breakdowns, hysterical nerve complications. She
yelled and cried a lot. She also had heart problems. Her children now live in
Israel. They are very talented, and the grandchildren are talented also.
Young people in Israel often
ask their parents who escaped miracously, "How could you let these
things happen to you? Why didn’t you
organize a
resistance against the Nazi murderers?
How is it possible that the Nazis could do anything they wanted with the Jewish
population?" I admit, if they ask me, that we, Jewish people did not do
anything, not counting a few exceptions. There were a handful of people who did
hide and fight in the woods as partisans or participated in resistance in a
military group. What was the reason? Before I reply, let me add that there was
a resistance in the Warsaw Ghetto when they learned that the Jewish population
was headed to gas chambers and there was no more hope. When the Germans started
to lose at front lines, they were still wining against the Jews, because they
could kill more and more Jews. How was this possible? It was possible because
we, Jewish people were taught for hundreds or maybe thousands of years that we,
Jewish people do not have to fight for our own country, that we could live in
the diaspora
until the Savior arrives and gathers the Jews from all over the world and takes
them to the Holy Land , to Israel . If the Jews would have
been thinking differently, they could have bought a country. And, if they would
have owned a country, then they would not have been so defenseless. They would
have their own military equipment. They could have defended themselves. The
Jews would have became a great nation. But the diaspora ruined them. We can see
that the little Israel managed to achive many great things in 1967, during the
Six-Day War. And we can see with our own eyes that now Jews have their own
little country. The Jews can protect themselves, Israel and all the Jews in the
world against every enemy.
Let’s continue with our
situation at that time. During German occupation we lived in Brussels, Belgium.
At the beginning they did not persecute Jews. But is was a trick. The Germans
were preparing for the extermination of Jews. Nobody could think that any of
this was possible. We got bad news from Poland which was then attacked by the
Germans. But let us admit honestly, we did not believe that such things might
happen. In our building, a German Jew named Fröshel lived with his wife and
daughter. Soon after the German occupied Belgium, he received a call up from
the Gestapo. He was a wealthy man in Germany, he had registered with the
Germans earlier. Of course, he got very scared. He did not know what to do. The
best thing would have been to hide with his family in another apartment. He
even asked my poor mother what to do, should he report to the Germans or not. I
remember my mother answering, "If you did not do
anything wrong, then you do not have anything to fear." He replied that he could not trust the Germans.
Nevertheless he went to the Gestapo with his wife and daughter, and of course,
he never came back. You can imagine what was his fate. They ruined him. They
exterminated him. The Jewish fate became even worse, we heard about this or
that friend disappearing, they were dragged away on the street or from their
apartment at night. The fear was very, very heavy. We heard about people going
to a funeral, and there Germans circled them in the cemetery and dragged them
away.
We had a friend, she was
my wife's friend, who was also from Beregszász. Her name was Judit Steinberger.
Once she came up to our apartment, and she had a cross around her neck. It was
not a small cross, it was quite visible. And she said that she could go
everywhere and nobody would think that she was Jewish. Sometimes she went to
restaurants where German soldiers were drinking. She was a good looking girl,
so the Germans bought her sweet brandy in small glasses. She told us that the
brandy went into her head and she said, "Ich
bin a Jude." "I am a Jew." But the soldiers told her in German,
“You are stupid. If someone wears a cross around her neck then she cannot be
Jewish. A Jewish person does not wear a cross around her neck." The
Germans did not believe her. They were so sure that a Jewish person would not
put a cross around her neck. She told my wife to wear a cross. My wife asked my
opinion, but I said not to wear a cross. I was not a religious fanatic. I did
not even know our religion well.
You see, we were all by ourselves. Nobody helped us with advice.
The Jews were defenseless and vulnerable to the Nazis. In this case, it should
have been imperative to save lives. We, Jews, grew stupid. They made us stupid.
And the Germans tried gradually to exterminate all Jews, calculating every step
along the way. In Belgium they did not bother those Hungarian Jews who were Hungarian citizens.
In the beginning of 1943, Jews could walk free in Hungary , even if suppressed. The country was occupied by the
Germans only in 1944. It looked like that Hungarian Embassy was protecting those
Hungarian Jews who had their citizenship documents. The Hungarian Embassy gave
my parents and me a paper, in which they asked the Germans not to deport us.
Once, in 1943 the Gestapo burst into our house, but after seeing this paper,
they left. This was a trick. By then they knew about us. A new law came out
later. Those countries that were friendly with the Germans, should take back
their Jewish citizens from Belgium to their homeland. Otherwise the Germans would
deport the Jews. The Consulate Associate who dealt with these cases was named
Kelemen. He used to shout at the unfortunate Jews.
We heard that this or that friend was dragged away. But
we never thought that they were taken to the gas chambers. Such a crazy
barbarism never existed on the earth before. The liveliness was hard for the Jews
in hiding. How did we stay alive? My parents, brother and I often ventured out
to the flea market. We bought used clothing. We turned the cloths out, and from
them we made linings for women's purses and bags. Because Jewish purse makers
could not get new materials to line their purses, they were happy if we
delivered them our home made purse linings. Then we cut gloves from all kind of
discarded clothes and blankets. We sewed the gloves on our sewing machine.
Someone bought the gloves from us. Where the gloves went, we did not know it
yet. But later on we learned that these gloves were delivered to Buchenwald concentration camp. These gloves were distributed among poor prisoners
in concentration camps and forced labor camps, so the work would go better
outside in snow and freezing temperatures. Our hands were freezing anyway,
because our ragged gloves were ruined fast, first at the fingertips, while we
were carrying stones and bricks to construction sites. At that time when we
sewed these gloves for living, we did not know yet where and to whom they would
be delivered. We lived in constant fear. But we were still free. We heard here
and there, that someone was taken. A lot of people were dragged away at night by Nazi savages and Gestapo bandits. We moved to another
place. We went hiding. We moved to a furnished apartment, while we kept our old
apartment and paid the rent for it. Then we committed a grave mistake. Deadly
mistake. Our poor mother said that she was afraid of being in our new furnished
apartment. We heard that the Nazis were taking Jews from next-door buildings.
It was October 1943. So my poor parents and my younger brother moved back to
our old apartment on Rue Planten. My wife and I went back to live on the same
street. Maybe a neighbor saw us going home and informed the Gestapo. Maybe they
came for us because we were registered at a Belgian City Hall in Anderlecht for this home address and the Gestapo extracted our
address. We were registered there as Jews. But it is more likely that someone
reported us to the authorities, because on that very night when we moved back,
we woke up hearing loud knocks on the door. People were shouting and banging on
our door with rifle butts, and demanded we open the door immediately. If we
would not open the door, they would break it down, for sure. My wife and I, we
got really scared and opened the door. These murderer gangsters rushed in.
There was a Gestapo guy in military uniform, but there was another Gestapo guy
in civilian cloths with a gun on his belt. They shouted at us: "Police
alamand!" This means German police in French. And they shouted "Deutse
policei! Karte d’identite", meaning "German Police! Identification
Cards!" Scared as we were, we presented our ID cards with stamp imprints
JUDE JWIF. We also showed them a document issued by the Hungarian Consulate a
few months back which stated that as Hungarian citizens we can't be deported if
we show this paper.
Earlier, this document was honored, but now they did not
let us go. The Gestapo guy in military uniform read our names and said,
"Komt mit", meaning "You come with us." I asked,
"Varum." "Why?" The Gestapo in civilian clothes gave out a big
yell. We got even more frightened. He told to my poor wife that this was the
end for us. We had to follow our brothers and sisters, who were already dragged
away. We started to pack, crying. They let us pack our things, because they
knew that they would take all our valuables. We were yelled at to hurry up,
because our father and mother were already waiting down on the street. They
would come with us. Now we got even more frightened. These murderers wanted to
take our parents and my younger brother, too. Meanwhile, another bandit dressed
in military clothing came in to our apartment; with his hand on this head. He
showed the other Nazis how much luggage were packed by my mother and my younger
brother who were waiting downstairs in a car driven by this Nazi. We were
pushed down the stairs, my wife and me, and then we saw again my mother and Józsi,
my younger brother. Both of them were very frightened. The Nazis pushed us into
the car. One of the SS lifted our house key and told us that they would give it
to the Hungarian Consulate. They started the car and took us to Avenue Louis. We
stopped in front of the Gestapo building. We got out there and took our luggage.
A woman's shoe fell off, and I tried to pick it up. The civilian Gestapo guy hit
me on my face with all his force. Another SS soldier pushed us down into the
Gestapo basement. All unfortunate Jews captured by these Nazis were kept there
in this basement. Some people were brought in earlier, their names were written
with pencil on the wall. I found my dear brother-in-law's, Kálmán's signature. He wrote: "Learn to endure and to
suffer. Kálmán Goldberger". We stayed in this basement for a few days.
From here, they took us to a collection camp in Malin. This camp consisted of empty
military barracks. The Nazis prepared it well in advance to hold Jewish people
here and later transport these unfortunate souls to Auschwitz or other concentration camps.
After our arrival, we were led into a large room, where
we lined up. Tables were set up where we had to give up our money, jewels and
all other valuables. My poor mother had a golden watch and beautiful diamond earrings;
she had to give up everything. My poor wife and I, we stood further back. Our
line moved slowly ahead. At the tables, they shouted at us, “If you try to keep
anything valuable, we will punish you”. I had false teeth. I put one thousand Belgian
franks under my false teeth. But as we approached the tables, I saw someone was
beaten up badly. I also saw that they removed the false teeth. I got really
frightened, of course. They would beat me up if they find the money. So I
chewed on the money as hard as I could, and when they were not looking, I threw
it under a wardrobe. We gave them all our money and jewels at the table. They
hanged a letter "Z" on a string around my neck. This stood for "Zürick
halten", meaning "Held Back", because we belonged to another
country, Hungary . But Hungary did not let us Jews back into our homeland. At the
end, the German Nazis deported us too, in the same category with Turkish Jews,
who had letter "Z" around their necks, too. Polish Jews had a green
card hanging from their necks, as I remember, the capture on the green card
said "Displaced". These people were very depressed. They knew that their
future would be the worst. Auschwitz and total destruction would wait for them. Later we
were directed into a large room, where we put down our luggage. SS guys yelled.
There was a young Jewish man in the room. He was our room supervisor. They
called him "Stubedinst" in German. It was organized who would clean
the steps. We slept on the floor; we covered it with some clothing. We peeled
potatoes. We ate green pea soup, which was sent by the Jewish Council from Brussels . At that time, the Jewish Council still existed, but
they reported to the Germans.
Germans did everything, including extermination of Jews, in
a very well organized way. During the daytime we walked in circles in the courtyard.
Gypsies arrived from France , but not as many of them as Jews. Whenever they
marched in circles in the courtyard, the Jews were not allowed to go down to
the courtyard. We only saw them from the windows. They played their violins
beautifully. We were in Malin for approximately seven weeks. Then it was
announced that all people with the letter "Z" were to be transported
from Malin, first the men, then the women. We all cried. The men were lined up
on the courtyard. I could not even say good-bye to my mother. She came out to
the courtyard and shouted to me "Béla, Béla", but a soldier hurried
to her and pushed her back inside the building. I never saw my poor mother
again.
We, the men, with my father and younger brother and a lot
of other people were taken to Brussels on a big truck. We went back to the basement of the
Gestapo building. We stayed there for a few days, only the men, including my
father and my younger brother. The women with the letter "Z" stayed
in Malin. They were transported later to a female camp in Ravensbruck. Few days later they took us all men to Garde Nord Railway
Station. Civilians circled us there. We boarded on an empty train. When our
train left the station, uniformed SS Nazi soldiers came in. We just sat there,
very frightened. Our train reached the German border, and we stopped there. Uniformed
German Nazis came in and asked for our passport. It was just a mistake. A
German soldier coming with us from Brussels told them that we were "Juden", i.e.
Jewish. Then they left, and our train arrived to Germany . Through the window, we saw bombed-out houses. Our
train went ahead, and we arrived to a huge railway station. We got off. The SS
soldiers put up their iron helmets. They pointed their bayoneted guns at us, while
we were getting off the train. It seemed to me that they did not want anyone to
escape. Anyway, no one could escape in a foreign country and in a foreign city.
Then German policemen guarded us for awhile. There was a very frightened young
Polish Jew, who asked us if we were Jewish too. He was taken to Buchenwald , also. Some curious people, mostly women, gathered around us. One of
them had a small swastika hanging from the end of her headscarf. She said to
the others that we were Jews. A policeman started to speak in French. He
probably heard that we came from Belgium , and wanted to practice his French language skills.
Another policeman came to us later, shouting. Uniformed Germans arrived a
little bit later on, and they pushed everybody up onto the trucks. It was their
job to deliver the unfortunate prisoners to the concentration camp in Buchenwald and hand us over to the SS bandits in the camp. The trucks started to
leave with us on board. There was a young man among us, who spoke Hungarian
very well. His name was Oringer, and his wife came to Belgium from Austria . He spoke German well. He noticed that the road
signs showed the way to Buchenwald . He told us in Hungarian that they were taking us to
Buchenwald . We arrived there soon. We got off the trucks. The
was a big entrance gate, a huge iron fence, and a sign with big letters "ARBEIT
MACHT FREI" (Work sets you free). What kind of lie and deception that was
too! We experienced it later, that no matter how hard the prisoners worked
until total exhaustion, freedom never came from that. Clock on the gate tower.
Doors below to SS offices. SS soldiers were standing before the offices. They
shouted names. They shouted our names too. They read these names from a list.
And if I remember correctly, first they read my father’s name, Lébi Schwartz,
then mine, Béla Schwartz. I said "Ja wohl", and the SS soldier looked
at me. Then he read my younger brother’s name, József Schwartz. He said
"Hier". Then they read more names, names of Jews from Turkey and other countries, where they were not allowed to
return. When all names were read, SS soldier said "Let’s go". The SS
showed us where to go in the camp. We went to a disinfecting station first,
where we had to undress. They took our clothes and everything else. We were
standing there naked. Then we had to stand in front of an SS soldier one by
one. We had to bend down, pull our ass apart. The SS soldier looked into our
ass to see if we tried to hide something valuable in our rectum. They already
took everything from us, watches, jewels, money in Belgium , in the Malin collection camp. Now we had to stand
naked in front of other, younger looking prisoners. They held an electronic
haircutting machine. They cut all our hair from our head and body, from
everywhere. Then they sprayed us with disinfectants. From here, we went to a
storage room. We never saw again our clothes, neither I, nor my younger brother
or my father. We could keep our underwear, shirt and shoes. If you had glasses,
you could keep them, too. They gave us camp clothes. We looked terrible in
them. A stripe was painted on the threadbare pants. An X shape was painted on
the worn jacket. They gave us a ragged cap. Some of us got a striped, thin camp
coat. They sprayed some water on us, maybe to clean us. Then they gave us these
terrible looking clothes. It was a horrible Nazi trick. Nobody could escape in
these awful clothes. After all this, we had to line up and we were led to a
barrack. Some prisoners were already in the barrack. We were stopped in front
of the barrack. We had to stand there for an hour, maybe for more. It was a
very cold night. We were standing there in thin rags, we were cold, we shivered.
Then a civilian came out of the barrack and loudly said to us in German, "You
should know that you got to work here." Then they let us Jews arriving
from Belgium into this large wood barrack. This was not a Jewish
barrack. Inmates in this barrack were arrested and transported to Buchenwald because they did something against the Germans. They were mostly Polish
and German, to my knowledge. Only we, Jews were taken to the concentration
camps for nothing. This civilian man, whom I mentioned before, was the blockleader.
In German, "blockalteste". He was a prisoner too, a German man. Maybe
he was not faithful to the Nazis, or he was brought in for some other reason to
Buchenwald as a prisoner. Here, he became good enough for the
Nazis to keep an order in the barrack, to be a blockleader, a
"blockalteste". After a long wait outside, they begin to let us into
the barrack. They gave us a camp badge to sew on our chest. This badge was cut
out of a red cloth. Red cloth meant political prisoner, although we were not
political prisoners. We were taken to Buchenwald only
because we were Jews. They gave us a small yellow cloth that meant we were Jews.
We sewed this yellow rag on the red rag. The red and yellow rags together
looked like the Star of David, so whenever the Nazis looked at us they knew we
were Jewish. This was dangerous itself. Then they gave us a long red ribbon
with camp number on it. Everybody had a number. Mine was 20631. The "Stubedinst"
gave us a needle and yarn to sew on the red and yellow rags. But the needle and
yarn was not right. I told the Stubedinst that it would be hard to sew it on
without proper needle and yarn. He looked at me and asked "Can't you sew
it on?" I said, "I can, but it is not easy." He said
"Geselt machen asztu gekent", which meant "But you could make
business deals, could not you?" He was a prisoner, but not a Jew. He hated
Jewish prisoners. So sad. We spent that night close to each other. Next day,
they escorted us to another barrack, to Barrack 22. This was a Jewish barrack.
The Blockalteste was a German Jew, who had been in concentration camp since
1939. His name was Emil Karlbach. He was arrested for his extreme leftism at
the time. He was strict with prisoners. There was an A section and B section. Toilet
and wash basin were in the middle. Barrack 22 and later Barrack 23 were Jewish
barracks. There were other barracks with other nations, other prisoners. There
were Russian, Polish, Gypsy, French, Belgian and German inmates. They said
there were about twenty thousand prisoners in the Buchenwald concentration camp. They transported prisoners from here to other
concentration camps, to Auschwitz and they brought prisoners here from other camps. Who
knew what these Nazis did! They had the prisoners work for them free. They made
them suffer. They squeezed out of them everything they could. They manufactured
guns, weapons and other military stuff. And they were constantly building
something. We carried brick, cement, sand, stone, wood and other construction
materials. In Buchenwald , the Germans did not tattooed a number on a
prisoner’s arm. We, the newcomers arriving from Belgium , were not allowed to work at the beginning for about
two weeks or a bit longer; they said we were quarantined for observation. Every
morning and evening we had to go to the Appel Platz. The blockleaders reported there
how many people were in the barrack, how many were sick. They counted everybody.
Every barrack stood separately. When a German or SS soldier came in with a book
or paper, the blockleader shouted "Attention! Hats off!" and reported
our number to the SS soldier. While the soldier made a note, we were standing
there hatless, in attention. When all barracks were counted for, we could go
back to our barrack. We had iron beds on the top of each other, the bodies were pressed to each
other. We lived in extremely bad conditions.
Buchenwald housed only
male prisoners and some mislings (Jews in mixed marriages, whose wives were not
Jewish). A misling’s wife could live free in Germany. There were also Polish
Jews. Mostly long term prisoners, who were kept for construction work in order
to build brick walls. They were young people. There was a German, non-Jewish Capo
in the camp. He was also a prisoner, as I heard. He was taken to the camp
because he was member of the Socialist Workers Party. His name was Zilbert Capo. He was an architect. The Nazis used
him in construction work. Even the Nazis listened to his advice, and he advised
the Nazis not to exterminate a certain number of young Polish Jews. He offered
to train them to build walls for future factories to be erected next to our
camp. These young men lived in Barrack 22. This Capo was not brutal. There were
more Capos and "Forarbeiters", meaning foremen in Buchenwald . They were not Jewish. We sat in the barracks around the table during
daytime. Every morning and evening we went for head counting. This observation lasted
for two or three weeks. After this observation period was over, we started to
work. We carried stone, sand, brick, wood to the construction site. The
Bauführer or construction leader, was an SS named Beker. He was a brutal Nazi;
he hit and beat up prisoners all the time. He wanted to finish this building
soon. They called this building S-midi. He shouted that S-midi should have been completed
already. Work was going on for months. They started to bring in equipment to the
building. Prisoners knew that the Nazis wanted to manufacture fo1 and fo2 bombs,
which could shoot very far. But not one was completed ever. When Buchenwald
camp was bombed later, this building and all machines in it were totally
destroyed. I think Americans dropped these bombs on the building.
We lived horrible times.
Freezing cold, starvation, fear and abnormal working conditions. My poor father
and younger brother suffered enormously. Very early in the morning, we went to
Appel Platz to be counted, then we marched throught the entrace gate to work, 4
or 5 people in a row, we marched as soldiers do. An SS with a stick in his hand
counted how many people went out. Everybody had to keep the pace. To march
better, a wind and percussion band stood at the road side and played the beat.
In the evening on our way back to the camp, they played again, so the Nazi SS with
his stick could count us, wretched prisoners returning from forced labor easier.
It was one of their tricks. They could claim that they even provided music for
prisoners. Former anti-Nazi musicians were transported to Buchenwald, and
recruited into this wind and percussion band.
Old people died fast. Young
ones, too. Bitter cold, starvation and fear killed people. A big crematorium
chimney was burning with big flames, dead bodies were burned to ashes in huge
iron furnaces. A lot of people died of diarrhea. We had few physicians, also
prisoners, in the so-called "Rever", but they did not help us much. Dead bodies were carried
from here to burning furnaces all the time. Once, my stomach started to hurt at
work, and I had a diarrhia. What did I do? I found a piece of burnt charcoal
under the snow, I cleaned it with snow, scraped off the dirt and began to chew
it, chew it, until it helped me a bit. I also gave it to others. I gave a piece
of charcoal to chew to my poor good friend, Stern. It healed him, however, he
was taken away by a later transport. He never returned. To my best knowledge,
his wife and little son did come back from Ravensbruck female concentration
camp. Later, I ended up in Rever with diarrhea. The older son of Belgian
Epstein died in diarrhia next to me.
Not everyone had shoes, a
lot of people wore wooden slippers. It was bad for the feet and body. Life was
a horror in Buchenwald. Once, we were inside the gate coming back from work,
and we already started to run to our barrack, then near Appel Platz we noticed
a swing-like thing. When everyone arrived there, we saw it was not a swing, but
gallows; the Nazis wanted to hang someone there. The SS announced on the
loudspeaker that interpreters must step forward. The interpreters were
prisoners, too. The SS said in German, that this and this prisoner tried to
escape (he told his name) or he actually escaped, but they captured him.
Therefore this prisoner would be hanged in front of thousands of people. Soon
they escorted this unfortunate man there, and the Nazi SS hanged him to the
hook. The cord was already around his neck. I am still shivering, when I think
about this event. Of course, by the time the wretched man was hanged to the
hook, nothing was under his feet. He went up on a little ladder, but they took
it already away. He just hung in the air. His hands were tied, and they moved.
His face became very red. But he still moved around a bit. Then his face turned
gradually paler. And by the time life left his body and he suffocated, his face
was colorless, pale, and dead. They left him on the gallows for some time. Then
he was cut off and taken to be burned in the crematorium.
In Buchenwald, Nazi SS
soldiers were able to call every barracks on the phone from the gate or from
the SS offices. Mostly, they phoned blockleaders if they wanted something
special, for example to see a prisoner with this or that number at the gate. And
who knows what happened to that prisoner! Or often our barrack loudspeaker
announced that a blockleader needed to go to the gate immediately and fast. Blockleaders
were prisoners too, but they spoke perfect German. They were chosen by Nazi SS
soldiers. They were tough people. In the barracks, they issued the orders.
Our blockleader was a
German Jew. In July of 1944, maybe on the 20th or 21st of July, I do not
remember exactly when, we were inside the barrack, in Barrack 22. Our barrack
loudspeaker started to announce the news. It seemed that they forgot to turn
off the loudspeakers when the SS listened to the news in their office. But then
we at the Barrack 22 heard from the loudspeaker as the radio announcer said
that Jews attempted an assassination against Fuhrer. Then I said to my poor
father and younger brother, "Now we are in trouble.
Now the Nazis will kill all of us, Jews." I think we were all
very frightened. But it seems that the Nazis learned that the assassination attempt
was planned by a colonel named Stauffenberg. At a meeting he put down his
briefcase with a bomb close to the Fuhrer’s leg. This time bomb was set to
explode in an underground map room. It would have been more powerful there, and
probably it would have killed everyone. But suddenly Hitler changed his mind
due to the heat or his usual mood changes. Immediately before this meeting he
changed the meeting place to a light wood barrack at the edge of the forest.
Here the explosion was not as powerful, compared to an underground explosion.
And, as we know, Hitler stayed alive. He suffered only superficial injuries. The
conspiracy against Hitler was unsucessful. But Hitler’s retaliation was successful.
He executed everbody who was suspicious. Most of them were brutally hung, a lot
of them were shot in the head. Everything would have been different if this
assassination would have been successful. So many people would have stayed
alive. But now the Nazis were able to extend the war as long as they could. And
they managed to exterminate huge part of the human race.
Let me mention how these
Nazis managed to fool the whole world. They pretended that they were paying for
our work. For a while they even printed camp money, so they could pay us,
workers. They paid two or three marks. This money was without value. "Buchenwald Concentration Camp" was printed on the money. You could not buy anything
with it. There was no place where you could buy anything. We saw a house-like
thing, they said it was the Heaftling Cantina for the prisoners to use. But who
would dare even go in that direction? The SS would probably shot him dead on
the spot. A Nazi one-armed civilian craftsman shouted to the prisoners "Ich verde zein un the auscalung" from time to time, that is "I will be there on payday", meaning if you do not work fast enough, you won’t get any money. Any
worthless money. Later on, they did not even bother to hand out this worthless piece
of paper. We kept carrying bricks, construction materials, cement, stones,
sand, and tried to go as close to the kitchen of the civil craftsmen as it was possible.
These craftsmen were free German men, who wore armbands and came to work to
Buchenwald. The refuse dump was next to their kitchen. I carried a piece of
stick with me and scratched the top of the pile. Sometimes I managed to find a
piece of lettuce or a bit of carrot. It was good against the hunger.
As I mentioned, Buchenwald was not exclusively a Jewish camp. Only a few
percent was Jewish. Barracks 22 and 23 were excusively Jewish, but Jews and
non-Jews worked together outside the camp. There was a father with his son, a
non-Jewish prisoner. I can’t say anything bad about the father. We worked
together for awhile. We carried bricks, cement, stones and other construction
materials side by side. Once I lugged a paper bag on my back, which contained
cement. As you know, cement will harden if it is mixed with water. He and his
son also dragged something. There was a little bridge, with water underneath.
When we stepped on the bridge, well, his son pushed me into the shallow water
with the cement bag on my back. Then he called out to the Nazi SS soldier. "Her posten ther juden machen szabotage". "This Jew sabotages work". I was lucky. The SS soldier did not shoot me in the head.
He saw this man’s cruelty.
In Buchenwald, Germans
manufactured weapons, guns, pistols, some stuff we did not know about. Machines
bore gun barrels. We built weapon factories. We had to remove hills and dirt to
make the ground even. I guess they wanted to build something there. I worked at
Rusztung Colony once. I had to drag wood logs to future building sites. They
build scaffolding from them. We carried construction materials and bricks there.
The builders stood on the scaffolding, and they cemented the bricks in their
place. After awhile, I was selected to work somewhere else. They started to
build a massive, strong building. They used a lot of cement, they poured big
cement holes. We carried big cement plates. Mostly German craftsmen lead the
work there. They were not prisoners. They came in wearing a stamped armband,
and after work they were allowed to go home. Old timer prisoners from Barrack
22 were their helpers. They build brick walls. They cut cement plates with
axes. German SS soldiers came in occassionally and they were talking to German
civilian craftsmen. We learned that they were building a large high voltage
electricity plant, because they did not have enough electricity for their
factories etc. Prisoners from other barracks also worked here, non-Jews,
Germans, etc.
At that time, in 1944 we
often had air raid warnings. Airplaines flew above Buchenwald, probably they
flew to bomb Germany. They were English
or American airplanes, or maybe planes from another country. At the beginning
we had to work during air raid warnings. Later, at the sound of sirens, we had
to run to our barracks. Everybody to his own barrack. If the air raid warning
was cancelled, then we had to go back to our work site. Once it happened that my
poor father and I, we did not hear that the raid was cancelled, and everybody
already ran back to work through the entrance gate. We were frightened, and
asked Jozef, who cleaned the barrack, for advice. He told us to go to the gate
and report at the SS soldier for work. I told my poor father that it was not a
good idea. Everybody already ran back to the work site, the gate was closed;
the SS soldier would beat us to death. Or shot us to death. So we decided to
stay in the barrack together with the inside people until everybody returned to
the camp. When everybody had to go to head counting at Appel Platz, we'd go
too. Then our problem would be solved. And that's how it happened. Air raids became
more frequent. The Nazi leadership then decided that all prisoners had to run
to the small forest nearby at the sound of the siren. After the danger was
gone, everybody had to hurry back to the work site. Some German prisoners also
worked there. They suggested that we hide in a big hole we were building there.
We put some hay-like wood stuff (which they used to protect fragile things) on
ourselves. Since SS guards disappeared during air raid warning, we could rest a
bit in this hole. When the siren stopped, we climbed out of the hole and
started to work. We did it a couple of times. I worked under a foreman then. We
met there in the morning and each of us went to the construction work from
there. This foreman was a German, to my knowledge he was brought to Buchenwald because he did not want to carry weapons for religious reasons.
One morning I left our
barrack in my ragged clothing, with a tin plate on my stomach. An ugly cap was on my head, its vizor was torn. I hurried to the building
that we were constructing then, which supposed to be an electric plant. To my
knowledge, if we met an SS soldier during work hours, we did not have to greet
him or yank our cap off. As I went, I saw two SS soldiers standing there. One
of them was German, he told me to approach him. I knew at once this meant
trouble. I yanked my cap off. The German soldier asked me why I missed greeting
him. The other soldier did not say a thing. I think he was Polish SS. I told the
German, that we do not have to greet soldiers during working hours. At this
moment, he hit me in the face with his fist, and then he hit me again. I was
lucky that he did not hit my eyes. I fell down. When I got up, I started to cry
while I was heading to our work site. There they asked me what happened, why I
was crying. I continued to do what I had to do, carried cement plates and other
stuff. Around 10 o'clock or half past 10
or 11 o’clock maybe, a siren started to blow. Through the window, we saw few poor
prisoners running to the small forest. Of course, we agreed to hide in the
hole, and cover ourselves with a straw-like material. And as no SS would be around,
we could rest a bit there. We hid in the hole. I hid there too, but suddenly I
looked out and saw that there were a few people still running to the small
forest. I thought, well, I better run to the forest. And I was out of the
building in a flash, and started to run to the forest. Somebody shouted at me,
why I was not running faster. As I looked back, I saw the SS soldier who beat
me up in the morning. He asked me to come closer. I went to him, and he hit me again
telling me to run faster. I arrived at the forest, crying bitterly. I lied down
to the ground. I was extremely tired, I fell asleep. I do not know how long I slept.
I am sure it was not much. When I woke up, I heard big explosions. Huge smoke
swirled towards the sky. I heard loud noises. This was a big air raid. Big
factories and buildings next to Buchenwald
concentration camp were all bombed to the ground. I heard loud moaning and
wailing nearby. Some men lost a hand or other body parts, some men were lying
in blood. After huge bombs few smaller firebombs were dropped, and they tore
off the prisoners’ body parts. Those who were not caught by the firebombs,
started to run. We ran out of the concentration camp area. Any other time they
would have killed us for this crime. But now, during air raid, the SS soldiers did
not do anything against us. We met an SS officer, and he directed us back to
the camp area. The air raid now was over. A lot of small firebombs hit the
small forest. The big Factory No. 10, where the gun barrels were manufactured,
was completely destroyed. A Romanian SS soldier, who otherwise was very brutal
person, died there. He could have hid, but he was such a patriotic person, he
kept guarding Factory No. 10 during the air raid. Smoke was rising from the
ruins everywhere. Numerous dead and injured were on the ground, many
unfortunate prisoners were wailing. SS soldiers were wailing too, they were also
injured in the air raid. Some of us, who accidentally survived this raid and
were not killed, had to carry the injured SS soldiers on stretchers to the SS
barracks, and put them down on the beds. There was an SS doctor in bloody medical
coat. We, prisoners were allowed to enter to the SS barracks only in order to
carry in these injured SS soldiers. If we would go there for any other reason,
they would have shot us to death. Those SS soldiers, who we carried on
stretchers, used to beat us up or tried to kill us, but now they called us "friends",
or "my friends". You got to think about this. Would they become cruel
SS soldiers again after their recuperation? The prisoners’ barracks were not
bombed. My poor father worked inside and he stayed alive, only his nose hurt. The
next morning, we went out to work again to clean up the ruins. Bekert, the Nazi
SS construction leader came and saw with big eyes how the building he built with
prisoners’ slave labor was totally ruined now. The electric plant building
disappeared from the face of the earth. Nothing was left of the building where
we worked before, just one huge and several small holes in the ground. Not a
single matchstick remained. Those poor people, who climbed down the hole to
rest during air raid, disappeared all without a trace; not even a single strand
of hair remained from their bodies. If I did not jump out from that hole in the
last minute and run after other prisoners into the woods, if I stayed there, my
fate would have been the same. I would have been gone. Not even a single strand
of my hair would have remained.
We started to rebuild the wall again. Nothing came out of
it. The wall fell down. There was no sand left for the construction. We filtered
dirt through a big iron sieve, and tried to use it instead of sand. Before the
air raid, there was a lot of coal. Coal was needed for everything. After the
bombing, the coal was burning and smoking for weeks or even months. It was on
fire. We saw the Germans did not have coal. Bekert, the Nazi SS construction
leader was gone. He was transferred or something else happened to him, but we
never saw him again. He was replaced by a one-eyed SS construction leader.
He was not as brutal and cruel as Bekert, or maybe he saw
that the end was near. Once he selected few younger prisoners from those men
who had shoes on their legs instead of wooden slippers, and could run. He
selected me too to be part of this transport commando. We learnt later that
this was a dog commando. We had to get up earlier. Nazi SS soldiers circled us.
Each held a trained vicious dog by chain or rope. These dogs could tear apart
any prisoner on the SS soldier’s command. We went outside the camp, farther
away from Buchenwald . They started to build houses for SS Nazis. Big
tucks delivered stones, bricks, sand, pebbles and other construction materials
there. Some SS houses were ready and lived in. We peeked into a house and saw a
young woman. A man came out in SS uniform. There was a big SS letter in a frame
on the wall. Maybe they showcased their Nazi beliefs with it. From our Jewish
barrack some old timers came along with us. As I mentioned earlier, they were
trained to build brick walls. They came from Barrack 22. Our job was to help
them by carrying all necessary building materials to the site. All kind of
prisoners worked together there. Once they told me and Jozef to grab a
wheelbarrow and bring very small pebbles, so called broken stones to them.
Jozef and I did so. I never had any problems with Jozef. He slept in the Polish
barrack, because he was arrested for some anti-Nazi activities, and I lived in
the Jewish barrack. An SS soldier stood close to the broken stone mound. There
was a small pile of red bricks nearby; it represented the concentration camp boundary.
No prisoner was allowed to step over the red brick pile. If it happened, the SS
soldiers were allowed to shoot him down. I was not thinking about this. I was
just in a hurry pushing my wheelbarrow to the broken stone mound in order to
get more broken stones. And Jozef was pushing his wheelbarrow. The area was deserted;
nobody was there, just me, Jozef and the SS soldier. The prisoners were not
allowed to address the guards at all. Nobody ever addressed the SS guards. It
would have been a deadly mistake. I saw that a guard stood nearby resting his
rifle on his shoulder. With one hand, he was holding a brown dog. Jozef looked
up to the guard and addressed him. My blood froze in my vein. He said to the
guard "Her pasten" and pointed at me, "Jude", meaning I am
Jewish. The guard looked at me and started to shout, "Eszt gibt nach Juden
en Deutsland", meaning "Are they still Jews in Germany ?" And he said something to his dog and pointed
at me. "Du hunte iz a Jude", meaning "Dog, this is a Jew".
But somehow the dog did not attack me, did not tear my ragged cloth off my body.
Then the SS started to push me towards the red brick pile in order to throw me
over the camp boundaries, so he could claim I wanted to escape. Then he could
shoot me. I thought, "My end is here. This SS guard would kill me. It does
not matter anymore what I do or what I say. I am finished." Then I jumped
in front of him, very close. I opened my ragged clothes on my chest and shouted
loudly to him to shoot me now at once. He will liberate me from all my
sufferings. He can only do me that favor. I do nothing but suffer, although I
never harmed anybody. I shouted at him very loudly in German that the only
reason I was there because my father was born Jewish. My mother was not Jewish.
(I just said it. The truth is that my mother was Jewish also.) The SS said
"Du Jude wir wellen gevinen der Krug aber wir wellen werloren?"
meaning "Jew, will we win or loose this war?" I shouted back, "I
do not know. Maybe you’ll win. Maybe you’ll lose." Then I realized I was
not shot by the SS soldier. So I shouted to him, "Her posten Das is meine
arbeit stelle lazinzi mich
arbeitern", that is "Let me continue my work, this is my
workplace." And I ran to my wheelbarrow and began to shovel broken stones
into my wheelbarrow. When it was full, I ran straight back to the other
prisoners, who were building the wall. Jozef pushed his wheelbarrow, too. He
did not say anything to me. I did not say anything to him. But when Jozef and I
arrived to the wall, I asked him. "What happened there? Why did you betray
me? Did you want me to be killed?" Other bricklayers, majority of who were
Jews, told me that my story could not be true, because Jozef was a good man.
They did not believe me, since Jozef was a prisoner, and Jozef was suffering, too.
Well, you can ponder about it. He talked nicely to bricklayer Jews. He acted as
a good person, because it was his best interest. But deep inside, he hated the
Jews. And he would have been happy to see a Jew killed. In the evening I
approached the deputy barrack leader, he was a German Jew, and asked him to
help me somehow. I felt, in this dog commando, they would kill me sooner or
later. And I told him what happened. His advice was to stay with my previous
group tomorrow morning, after the head counting at Appel Platz. I did exactly
that, nobody said a word. After that I kept working at the construction site
around the camp, removing the rubbles. I spent only two weeks or little more at
the dog commando, I do not remember exactly how long I was there. One day I was
selected to work with other prisoners at the officers' houses which were
destroyed by bombs. There were no more bombings in Buchenwald , they tried to fix the officers’ houses. During the air raid not only
the factories were destroyed, but the officers’ houses as well. Only smaller
firebombs reached these houses. Prisoners' barracks were not bombed at all.
First we have to put the Commander’s house in order. The Commander’s name was
Piszter. He was the leader of the Buchenwald
concentration camp. Who knows how many murders he ordered? If he was chosen to
be the leader of the Buchenwald concentration camp, he must have been a high ranked
SS Nazi officer. Who knows what kind of mass murders was he guilty of? We had
to bring in some furniture to the Commander’s house, and take out some other
stuff. There was a painting on the wall, Hitler's picture. "Der este
grossze tag" meaning the "First Big Day" when Hitler was elected
in 1933. This was the First Big Day for the Commander. For us, it was the day when
our life was destroyed. In two or three days, the Commander's wife was also at
the house. She was a small brown woman with a little girl, who was around 4
years old. Their maid was transported from the Ravensbruck camp, where my mother
and wife were held then. The maid was also a female prisoner and a servant to
the Commander’s family. We were still working at the Commander’s house, when
one rainy day I was mixing some cement and noticed that the Commander's little
daughter was jumping in a dirty puddle. What should I do? If I let her jump,
the SS guard will break my bones. If I take her out of the puddle, it means
trouble too, how could I touch the Commander’s daughter? Well, I decided to
take her out of this dirty puddle. I went to her and lifted her up. At this
very moment, her mother came out of the house and took her out of my hand. "Danke",
she said. "Thank you". So I got away without any trouble. I went to
get more sand, and I saw a highly ranked SS officer walking with his dog. It
was rumored among the prisoners that his house was destroyed by the bombing,
and his family was killed in the air raid.
Then we worked at other
houses which were ruined by the bombing. There was a not so young Nazi SS who
loved to hit the prisoners, to slap them in the face. When we gathered to march
to work, he was shouting. And he yelled like a dog ... wuff...wuff. Someone yelled
back ...wuff..wuff. He was looking around who was that person, but he could not
find him. He used to shout that the first world war was lost because of the
Austrians, and we would loose this war because of the Austrians, too. Another
Nazi’s face became red and started to shout that this war was caused by the
Jews, and the Jews caused every trouble, whenever he saw a poor prisoner who
had a red little badge and under it a yellow badge, because it meant that this
prisoner was a Jew. Such a fanatic Nazi! He was totally wrapped
up in Nazism and Hitler, and he was shouting all this nonsense. We were
especially afraid of this crazy Nazi SS, because he was fast to hit, strike or
kill. There was an SS in Buchenwald, who was, if I can say so, friendly to us
Hungarian-speaking Jews, but only because he was a Romanian SS. He did not
speak German, only Hungarian and possibly Romanian. He came to us several times
and talked to us in Hungarian. He asked if we had a watch. Of course, we had no
watches. The Nazis took it from us. This SS was possibly from Transylvania, a
part of Romania where Hungarians lived then. He was glad to speak in Hungarian.
Once he came to me at work, I was shoveling dirt then, and he started to talk
to me in Hungarian. I told him, "Mr. Engineer (we called
him Engineer, I do not know why), do not come to me please, because the German
SS will beat me up or maybe he will kill me, because I talked to an SS soldier". He said that he could talk to anybody, because he was
an SS too, and nobody could give him orders. And he said something else, and
then he walked away. The minute I turned around, there was another blond SS
guard and asked, "Was haste geret
mit hhe SS man", meaning what I talked about with this SS man. I yanked my
cap off my head at once and stood in attention. I replied that the SS man came
to me. "Well, I’ll finish you off", said the SS guard in German. "I’ll
send you somewhere with a transport and you’ll never come back." He took out
a pencil and paper and wrote down my number. My number was 20631. This meant
death. Prisoners were sent to such dangerous places that they never returned or
they died or they were killed. I started to cry. What could I do? In a few
moments, the SS guard came back and told me that he would not send me away, instead
he would kill me right there. Then he ordered me to take the shovel into my
hand, lift it up above my head and exercise with it. Lift the shovel above my
head with my two hands and bend my knees up and down all day, until I collapse.
These were his own words, "until you collapse". He sure meant it. A
starving, much suffered man could not go on with this exercise from morning
until the end of the day. And if I collapse, he would order someone to take me
to the crematorium to burn my body. How could I do this, with my shovel up
above my head and bending my knees, up and down, all day, until the end of work
day? How could I do that? I was young, barely 31 years old. The SS guard was watching
me, I could not stop. After this affair, I hardly saw the Hungarian-speaking
SS.
Let me mention again the SS
overseer, who loved to beat up and hit the prisoners. Some
Buchenwald prisoners wore red trousers. They were real Germans, they spoke with
a German accent. It is possible that they did not want faithfully serve Hitler
anymore, so they were taken to Buchenwald as prisoners. When this SS, who loved
to hit and yell, saw a German prisoner in red trousers, he ordered him to come
closer, and he asked him, "Was
bisz tu?" "Who are you?" The prisoner stood in
front of him like a soldier and replied: "Ich bin ein Reich Dajcse". "Du
biszt ein Reich Dajcse", and he forcefully slapped him on the face from
left and from right. I think the word Reich Deutsche meant German Empire. But
where was the German Empire by then? Russians were advancing. Americans,
English men and other Westerners were bombing
BOOK 2
I am already seventy-three years old. I think it is time
to write my memoir. I have enough material to write about, actually a lot. I
went through two world wars in my life. True, I was a small child at the time
of World War I.
I was born on July 18th, 1913 . After World War I, antisemitism was already strong
in Hungary . We lived in that part of the country which was very
poor, with a few exceptions. We lived in Vámosoroszi in Szatmár County until I was seven or eight years old. A lot of poor people lived there.
Small landholders also lived there, and two big landowners too, one of them was
called Stózinger, and the other's name was Kristóf. Wide marsh stretched
between two streets of the village. There were willow trees and small bridges.
The marsh often overflowed. At those times we could cross the street with punts
or walk on wooden planks that people screwed together and put down on the
water. Unhealthy weeds and grasses grew along the marsh. Bad odors rose from
the swamp. It was unhealthy. Youngsters were infected by tuberculosis and died
in a young age. There were more than enough funerals in the village. Pastor Márton
Incédi was busy attending burials. The marsh was drained later. A river was dug
out for the water to flow in, and it flows there ever since. Our unhealthy
swamp disappeared, and the high death rate was almost gone.
In 1921 or 1922, we moved to Kisszekeres, another village
nearby. We lived there until the end of the twenties. Then we moved to
Fehérgyarmat. We lived in difficult circumstances. There was a big jesiva, a
Jewish school in Fehérgyarmat, with a lot of students. The jesiva’s leader was
Rabbi Vilmos Güncler. Some opinions were heard by then, that sidewalks were
already too full of Jews and Jewish agents. Our life was hard. In the early
thirties my father went to Belgium to look for a job. I worked at a kosher butcher shop
in Gyarmat. I was greatly exploited. They began to shave off bócher’s, young
Jewish lad’s ringlet at paramilitary youth organization called levente. Fascism
became increasingly stronger in Germany . The strong hate against Jews could be felt more and
more in Hungary also.
I was drafted to the military in January of 1936. By
then, my poor mother and my younger brother lived in Belgium . I reported for military service at Mérk, a village
near the Romanian border. This boot camp was one cruel, inhuman torture. I stayed
there until September 1936. Some people were discharged, some were distributed.
I was transferred to Budapest to the Ludovica Military Academy , to serve at a military
mounted unit. My job was to take care of the horses and serve young men
studying to be military officers. We, I and other transferred lads, were
enlisted men. We became cavalry men. In Mérk, I served as an infantry man. At
Ludovica Military Academy I was the only Jew. Let me write here about an ethnic
German farrier sergeant. He did everything in his power to make sure it would
be me who had to lift up the legs of the most nervous horses while we put
horseshoes on the horses. He was praying for the moment when a wilder horse might
kick me to death. Anti Nagy was transferred there from another military garrison.
He was cleaning his two horses just across from me. I was cleaning my horses, and
he was cleaning his horses. He always passed anti-semitic remarks in my
presence. This time he said, "Jews took blood at Tiszaeszlár". I became agitated, jumped at him and started to hit him
with a horse scraper. Of course, he began to shout and gave out a high shrill.
The farrier sergant stopped by the door and asked, "What is going on here?" I approached him like a soldier, then I repeated him Anti Nagy’s
words, "He says, the Jews killed a girl in Tiszaeszlár and took her blood".
Because Anti Nagy said such a big lie, I had to beat him up. Then the sergeant
replied, "He is right."
Something just broke inside me. I realized then, that it
did not matter that I was a Hungarian soldier; I would always be a Jew, a displaced
person, and people would hate me. After this incident I did not clean the
horses so faithfully anymore, I did not pick horse dung from the floor at
night. Often I had to watch the horses at night.
Then, I was discharged in September 1937. There were no jobs
available. I worked for a miniscule amount of money at a butcher shop, but not
for a long time, maybe 2 1/2 or 3 months. After that, I got a job at a grocery
store on Drégely
Street as a
shop assistant. Here, I met young people who were members of the Hungarian Nazi
Arrow Cross Party. This was in the first half of 1938. They greeted each other
with raised hand, fascist style. During my next job, I was a bread delivery boy.
It was a very hard work. Later, I delivered corn and other stuff from a big
crop trader to several small stores. After this, I became an errand boy in a
paint shop. One evening I sat at a small dining room and I was listening to the
radio. Prime Minister Béla Imrédi was talking about politics and the Hungarian
problem. Finally he said, "And now I am going to speak about the Jewish
issue, which is like a tumor. It needs to be cut out of the body of the Hungarian
nation." He got a big applause.
When I could not get any more jobs, I went down to
Kisszekeres. My aunt lived there with my uncle and their seven children. My
uncle was a steward of an estate. From his entire family, only one girl
returned home, everybody else perished in concentration camps. This niece of
mine now lives in Israel . She is 73 years old, and her name is Erzsike.
In 1938, I traveled back to Budapest . By then I got a document, an affidavit from my
uncle and aunt, inviting me to come to America . The American consul notified me that the Hungarian
quota was already full for years to come, so I had no chance to go to America . Only those had a chance, people who went to see their
spouses, or children going to visit their parents, or older parents going to visit
their American citizen children. I registered, but I did not get a visa. I was
in a difficult situation again in Pest . I worked at a
butcher shop for a short time at Király Street . My boss was called Károly Klein. During the spring
time the Jewish Council called me to Síp Street , and they told me that I might immigrate to South America , since I was already registered. I replied that I
had just received my visa to Belgium to live with my parents and my younger brother. This
turned out to be a very bad choice. If I went to South America I would have escaped from German concentration camps.
Maybe I could have saved my poor parents as well. But I decided to apply for a
Belgian visa. I was told that I could get a visa for 3 months. I had no valid passport
by then. My passport expired. I tried to get a new passport at the Passport
Department of the Police Headquarters, but they did not even want to hear about
me. They advised me to wait for a new decree from the Department of Interior
Affairs. A few days later, I went back to the Police Headquarters to the
Passport Office. An older police officer stood at the entrance gate. I looked
at him, and I recognized him at once. He recognized me, too. I said Uncle Huszár, he said Béla
Schwartz. We knew each other very well from the Military Hospital on Gyáli
Street. During my military service, I had problems with my stomach and I was
sent to this hospital for examination. One day this Uncle Huszár, who was a
police officer, arrived to our hospital room in bad condition. He had a lung
infection. His bed was close to mine, and I helped him a lot. He saw my
kindness and he always asked me to get him this or that, or help him to get off
the bed or go back to bed. And now, we met again accidentally. We were very
glad to see each other again. He asked me about my life, what I was doing
there. I told him that I wanted to get an exit permit so I could go to Belgium.
His advice was to find a certain military officer, a captain at the Police
Headquarters, who was willing to secure short term exit permits for discharged
soldiers. He told me to find this captain. He also warned me to behave very
much like a soldier, otherwise this captain would refuse to help me. I thanked
for his advice, and went up to this captain’s
office at once. I knocked on the door. Someone said inside, "Come
in". I opened the door. I stood attention as a soldier in front of the
officer and with a very loud voice I said, "Captain, Béla Schwartz,
reservist infantry man, I hereby humbly ask for a three month leave to visit my
parents in Belgium." The officer watched
me intently, then took his seal and stamped a three-month exit permit in my passport.
By that time, I had a one-month extension in my expired passport with an
additional clause that on my way back my passport should be confiscated since
my citizenship is not clarified yet. Never mind that all my ancestors were born
in Hungary.
Then I purchased a ticket to Belgium , and in April 1939, I boarded the train. My passport
was examined at the German-Austrian border. The German officer, who examined
the passports, asked me, "How much money do you have?" Well, I did
not have much money. He asked, "What is it in there in that glass jar in
your luggage?" I told him, "Coffee". He asked, "Kind of
brewed coffee?" I said yes, although I did not understand too much German then.
He asked, "How come you do not speak German? All Jews speak German."
Previously, when we crossed the Hungarian border at Hegyeshalom, I exchanged
all my money at the Hungarian border patrol to German money. Then our train
started to leave the station and went all the way to Wien. I had to get off the
train there and wait for the Ostend train. Austria was annexed to Germany at that time. German soldiers in boots and iron
helmets were walking at Wien Grand Railway Station. After an hour, the Ostend train finally arrived and I boarded the train along
with other passengers. We waited a little, then our train left the railway station.
Many soldiers were traveling on the train. Two uniformed soldiers stood with
swastikas at the window. They looked out of the window. At one station, beer
was sold. I wanted to buy a bottle of beer, so I went to the window. I looked at
my German money, but I did not know how much it was. The arm banded German turned
to me and helped me to buy a small bottle of beer. He probably did not notice
that I was a Jew. I did not realize then how dangerous it was for me to travel
among these Nazis on the train. We traveled on the train for a day or two, and
finally we approached the Belgian border. The train stopped at Achen. I saw that
one man was taken off the train. The Germans stamped my passport, the Belgian
supervising officers boarded on the train and stamped it again. The train
started to leave the border station, and then went all the way to Brussels . I had to change train there to go to Antwerpen.
When I got off at Brussels , my poor father was waiting for me. We greeted each
other and kissed each other. His first words were, “See, my son, how grey-haired I became." Then we waited for the train to Antwerp, which arrived
shortly. We boarded the train and soon we arrived to Antwerp. As we got off the
train, I saw my poor mother who was waiting for me. She looked fragile,
hardships of her life broke her. We kissed each other. She asked about me, then
we went home to Magdalena Street. Józsi, my younger brother also came home to
meet me. We were so glad to see each other. He was a young guy then, barely 18
years old. He was trained to be a taylor. The next day, my father and I went to
the Police to register. We had to wait for a long time at the police station,
our number was two. But every time the officer called two in Flemish, he asked
some one else to come in. The officer asked my father whether he spoke Flemish
or French. My father told him he could speak a little bit French. He worked in
Charleroi ironworks at the time he was alone abroad. My mother and younger
brother still lived in Hungary, in Fehérgyarmat at that time. French was spoken
in that Belgian town. So after a lot of talks, I received a paper valid for
one-month stay. This paper warned me that I had to leave Belgium after one
month. This month went by very fast. My poor father went up to Brussels every
day. He worked in a used cloth factory. The factory owner was a rich man. He
bought a lot of used men suits and trousers. He had them mended on sewing
machines, had put ugly patches on the clothing. In Europe, nobody would wear this
clothing. Still it was good business for him. His name was Veiman. Cleaners and
steamstresses worked for him. My poor father worked as a cleaner. He shipped all
cleaned, patched up clothing to Belgian Congo for the black population. At that
time Congo belonged to Belgium. It was called Belgian Congo. Now it is called
Zaire. It does not belong to Belgium anymore. People must have been very poor
there if they wore those clothes.
My one-month permit was
about to expire. I did not want to go back to Hungary. My home country drew
closer gradually to German fascism. What could I do? I did not dare to stay in our home at Antwerp . I was afraid that the police would deport me. I traveled
to Brussels by train, and slept at remote relatives’ homes.
Later my parents moved to Brussels ,
and I stayed in their home. At a Brussels flee market we bought cheap men’s clothing, and we
mended and cleaned them at home. Veiman bought them from us at a pretty cheap
price. That’s how we supported ourselves. We also sewed linings into woman’s
purses. The purse and bag manufacturers bought it from us after they could not
buy new linings. Once I was at Veiman’s used cloth factory, and then I heard on
the radio as they announced, Germany started the war. The Germans attacked Poland , and they were already bombing Warsaw . We all got really scared. What would happen to the
Jewish community in Poland ? As soon as the Germans occupied Poland , they began to exterminate the Jews. In Belgium , the mood was sour. Wealthy people ran away to
wherever they could- some to Switzerland , some to England . Very few people could find refuge in these
countries. The lucky ones, within the quota, went to America . I also wanted to come here, but I could not get a
visa. I had been registered for an entry visa for two years already. The
American Consulate confirmed that I had to wait even longer, possibly for a
long time, because the Hungarian quota was tiny. I had no papers or IDs. I was
afraid all the time that the police would catch me and take me to the border, and
I would be deported. I did not have a residence permit.
In May 1940, Germany started a war against Belgium , Netherlands and France . People were running, fleeing. Chaos prevailed. We
went up to the Hungarian Consulate and asked them, “What is going to happen to
us now?” A Consulate Associate was standing at the door, and he told us, “You,
Hungarians have no reason to be afraid.” He was so wrong. Some people reached England traveling along the withdrawing British troops, and they
were saved. The Germans forged ahead and bombed the country. The Belgians blew
up the bridges. The king of Belgium surrendered. The German army occupied the city of Brussels on motorcycles, followed by military trucks and other
type of military personnel. Streets were deserted. It seems that at that time I
did not fully understood this dreadful tragedy, because I went out to the
street and watched the marching German army. Later in the evening, I walked along
the empty main street to the Grand Railway Station, the Garde Nord. On the way
back, I seemed to be lost, so I asked a Belgian man. The man was surprised, but
he gave me the directions. Probably he took me for a civilian German. Around
sunset, about 15-20 German soldiers stood in front of a house, talking. They looked
at me. They could have killed me if they found out that I was a Jew. Soon after
this, we went up to the Hungarian Consulate again. We were advised to find a
place, settle down, that we won’t be harmed at all. Meanwhile Germany flanked the Maginot line and attacked France and Netherlands . At the beginning, Germany did not hurt the Jews. We could work. A lot of
refuges returned and found jobs. When Paris capitulated, Hitler made his appearance in Paris , too. He was so happy, he started dancing. Jewish
shops remained open at first, but they had to display a sign in the shop window
saying in German that this was a Jewish property (Judishe unternemung). The
Nazis began to issue several anti-Jewish laws. Radios were confiscated. Trade licenses
(issued earlier by Belgians) were invalidated. Curfew was in effect after 7 pm . The Germans knew they could do whatever they wanted
with the Jews, because the Jews were displaced people, they did not have a
country of their own. The Germans ordered all Jews to register. Every Jewish person
had to register at Belgian City Hall . Registration was done by the Belgians; they stamped
the words JUDE-JWIF into our ID cards. There was a Jewish Council, a Jewish authority
in Brussels . For the outsiders, they seemed to help the Jewish
cause, all Council members were Jews. It was also a great trick. This Jewish Council
(Judenrat) received orders from the Germans about what to do with the Jewish
people. They registered all Jews, so the Germans knew about every Jew. They
received an order from the Germans to make a yellow star for every Jew. We had
to sew this on our clothing on the left chest. The Germans occupied a large
empty military garrison in the city of Malin , planning ahead that they would collect all Jews
there and later transport them into death camps. And that’s exactly what
happened. Everything was planned ahead, one decree after another. The deportation
process also began with a trick. The Jewish Council printed out some notices.
Of course, following the German instructions. These notices announced that Jews
had to report for work. Young Jewish boys delivered these notices to Jewish
addresses, and dropped them into their mailboxes. Of course, those people, who
reported for work, were deported to concentration camps. At that time, when I sewed
my yellow star on my chest, it was already very dangerous for a Jew to go
outside of his home. When the Germans saw a Jew with a yellow star, they
arrested him at once and took him to the basement of the Gestapo building. They
kept him there for a few days, until a sufficient number of Jews were gathered
in the basement, and then they transported them into a military garrison. Huge
transports went from there to Auschwitz and other concentration camps. We heard about what
was happening with the captured Jews, but we could not sincerely believe such enormous
mercilessness and viciousness could ever take place. Such evil, atrocious mass
murders, incomprehensible by human brain, were never committed against people
by people since the universe existed. We were dumbfounded. This was beyond
description, to take millions into gas chambers to kill and burn. Mothers, with
little children and babies. Horrors! The worst of it, is that it happened in
our lifetime; in the lifetime of our generation. Here, I have to pause and ask
myself, how could it all happen? Who is responsible? Who is guilty? What did
we, Jewish people, do so wrong, that we let all these things happen to us? It
seems that any minority among other people is always in danger. If the Jewish
people would have their own country, a strong and independent state, then none
of this could have happened to us. Therefore now every Jew is responsible for
helping the state of Israel in all accounts, so such a horrible tragedy against
the Jews could never happen again.
I mentioned that we lived in Belgium during the German occupation. Life became harder and
harder for the Jewish people. Livelihood was difficult. Great fear ruled. At
the beginning, Hungarian Jews were not deported. The Jews walked free in Hungary , too. They tortured those Jewish people who were reported
to the authorities or were taken away to forced labor camps. There were only a
very few exceptions, just a few humane officers who remained humans in
inhumanity. Somebody said, "It would be the wisest thing to take a couple
hundred forced laborer Jews home in a briefcase." You got to understand
that what they meant- to take home only the names, and exterminate people. In Belgium , where we lived, Germans issued new anti-Jewish laws
all the time. According to the new law, a letter from the Hungarian Consulate did
not protect a Hungarian Jew anymore, nor other Jews from other countries which
were friendly with Germany , because the Germans issued a law stating that if a
country wanted to protect its Jewish citizens, that country should transport
these Jews back home from Belgium . These German-friendly countries let very few Jews return
to their home country. Even if there were few people who could go home to Hungary , what happened to them? We know what their destiny was
after the Germans occupied Hungary . I had submitted a request in 1936 or 1937 when I
was a soldier. They asked me to come to Brussels to the Hungarian Embassy once. Cunningly they did
not mention in their letter why they wanted me to go to Brussels , only that I had to bring my ID. The Consulate
Secretary informed me at once seeing my ID, that I could not go home because I
was married. The Department of Interior Affairs replied that I could go home
only if I was single. I was married in July 1942, shortly after that we had to
sew on our yellow star. Then came the horrible tragedy. The Germans pounced on
the Jewish houses at night in Brussels in Anderlecht District. They chased down the Jews
onto the streets, put them on freight trains. They took them straight to gas
chambers in Auschwitz . My poor brother-in-law, Kálmán was also arrested
then, but he jumped out of the wagon and escaped. Later the Gestapo caught him,
and unfortunately his young life ended in Auschwitz . We managed to escape then only because the Germans did not come to our
small street named Rue Planten.
Hitler believed his army to be unstoppable. He attacked Russia . He occupied Ukraine , and went ahead all the way to Stalingrad . There the German Army came to a sudden stop, and then the Russians
started to push the Germans back slowly. The only problem was that this
push-back was very slow. The Germans took revenge on the Jews. The Secret
Police and the Gestapo searched for hiding Jews as if this would have solved
the war problems. The atrocities were enlarged by the fact that there were
people willing to report the hiding Jewish people to the Gestapo. The Gestapo savages
went to collect these Jews at nighttime; they loudly banged their doors with
rifle butts. I heard the Nazis even paid money for each reported Jew. The
unfortunate Jews did not know what to do, wherever they went, wherever they
worked, they were frightened that the Nazi Gestapo would catch them. The
Gestapo was looking for hiding Jews all the time. Sometimes they broke down the
doors of Jewish homes at daytime, but they did it mostly at night, hitting the
doors with riffle butts.
My two sister-in-laws got a small job in Scharbeck
District in Brussels . They had to mend mattresses. The Nazi savages broke down the door on them
at daytime. Someone must have reported them. Olga, my younger sister-in-law was
heavily pregnant, maybe 8 or 9 month pregnant. The Nazi savages decided that instead
of the pregnant Olga, they would take Rózsi, my other sister-in-law. Poor Rózsi
got very scared, as I heard, the Nazis hit them. Then she said, "Leave me alone. I have children." Then the Nazis asked her, "Where are your
children?" Rózsi realized what might happen if she tells them where her children were
hiding along with other Jewish children. So she did not tell them where her
children were. The Nazis started to beat her. She ran to the window and jumped
out of the window. I think they were on the third floor. She broke her bones
badly and lost her consciousness. People came rushing together. Kálmán, my poor
brother-in-law was closeby and he saw this disaster. He started to cry stroking
Rózsi’s hand. No one knew that he was
her brother. The Nazi murderers at that moment did not know what to do next.
They allowed Rózsi to go to the hospital, and told her doctor to notify them
when she gets better in order to take her away, along with the other Jews. Even
if they allowed for Olga to get away earlier, now they decided to take with
them my poor heavily pregnant sister-in-law. She probably died in the Auschwitz
crematorium, or maybe she was killed even beforehand, as her delivery date drew
closer. We went to visit my poor sister-in-law, Rózsi in the Scharbeck
Hospital, her leg and arm bones were broken. The Gestapo came also to check
whether she was ready to go with them. When she recuperated a little, she
escaped from the hospital. I heard later that her doctor was taken away because
he did not collaborate with the Germans in Rózsi’s deportation. With great difficulties, she, her husband, Dezső and their children
survived the bloody war in Brussels ; they were liberated in
Belgium . Poor Rózsi passed away
in Israel a few years ago. Dezső, her husband died a few months before her. She
often had serious nervous breakdowns, hysterical nerve complications. She
yelled and cried a lot. She also had heart problems. Her children now live in
Israel. They are very talented, and the grandchildren are talented also.
Young people in Israel often
ask their parents who escaped miracously, "How could you let these
things happen to you? Why didn’t you
organize a
resistance against the Nazi murderers?
How is it possible that the Nazis could do anything they wanted with the Jewish
population?" I admit, if they ask me, that we, Jewish people did not do
anything, not counting a few exceptions. There were a handful of people who did
hide and fight in the woods as partisans or participated in resistance in a
military group. What was the reason? Before I reply, let me add that there was
a resistance in the Warsaw Ghetto when they learned that the Jewish population
was headed to gas chambers and there was no more hope. When the Germans started
to lose at front lines, they were still wining against the Jews, because they
could kill more and more Jews. How was this possible? It was possible because
we, Jewish people were taught for hundreds or maybe thousands of years that we,
Jewish people do not have to fight for our own country, that we could live in
the diaspora
until the Savior arrives and gathers the Jews from all over the world and takes
them to the Holy Land , to Israel . If the Jews would have
been thinking differently, they could have bought a country. And, if they would
have owned a country, then they would not have been so defenseless. They would
have their own military equipment. They could have defended themselves. The
Jews would have became a great nation. But the diaspora ruined them. We can see
that the little Israel managed to achive many great things in 1967, during the
Six-Day War. And we can see with our own eyes that now Jews have their own
little country. The Jews can protect themselves, Israel and all the Jews in the
world against every enemy.
Let’s continue with our
situation at that time. During German occupation we lived in Brussels, Belgium.
At the beginning they did not persecute Jews. But is was a trick. The Germans
were preparing for the extermination of Jews. Nobody could think that any of
this was possible. We got bad news from Poland which was then attacked by the
Germans. But let us admit honestly, we did not believe that such things might
happen. In our building, a German Jew named Fröshel lived with his wife and
daughter. Soon after the German occupied Belgium, he received a call up from
the Gestapo. He was a wealthy man in Germany, he had registered with the
Germans earlier. Of course, he got very scared. He did not know what to do. The
best thing would have been to hide with his family in another apartment. He
even asked my poor mother what to do, should he report to the Germans or not. I
remember my mother answering, "If you did not do
anything wrong, then you do not have anything to fear." He replied that he could not trust the Germans.
Nevertheless he went to the Gestapo with his wife and daughter, and of course,
he never came back. You can imagine what was his fate. They ruined him. They
exterminated him. The Jewish fate became even worse, we heard about this or
that friend disappearing, they were dragged away on the street or from their
apartment at night. The fear was very, very heavy. We heard about people going
to a funeral, and there Germans circled them in the cemetery and dragged them
away.
We had a friend, she was
my wife's friend, who was also from Beregszász. Her name was Judit Steinberger.
Once she came up to our apartment, and she had a cross around her neck. It was
not a small cross, it was quite visible. And she said that she could go
everywhere and nobody would think that she was Jewish. Sometimes she went to
restaurants where German soldiers were drinking. She was a good looking girl,
so the Germans bought her sweet brandy in small glasses. She told us that the
brandy went into her head and she said, "Ich
bin a Jude." "I am a Jew." But the soldiers told her in German,
“You are stupid. If someone wears a cross around her neck then she cannot be
Jewish. A Jewish person does not wear a cross around her neck." The
Germans did not believe her. They were so sure that a Jewish person would not
put a cross around her neck. She told my wife to wear a cross. My wife asked my
opinion, but I said not to wear a cross. I was not a religious fanatic. I did
not even know our religion well.
You see, we were all by ourselves. Nobody helped us with advice.
The Jews were defenseless and vulnerable to the Nazis. In this case, it should
have been imperative to save lives. We, Jews, grew stupid. They made us stupid.
And the Germans tried gradually to exterminate all Jews, calculating every step
along the way. In Belgium they did not bother those Hungarian Jews who were Hungarian citizens.
In the beginning of 1943, Jews could walk free in Hungary , even if suppressed. The country was occupied by the
Germans only in 1944. It looked like that Hungarian Embassy was protecting those
Hungarian Jews who had their citizenship documents. The Hungarian Embassy gave
my parents and me a paper, in which they asked the Germans not to deport us.
Once, in 1943 the Gestapo burst into our house, but after seeing this paper,
they left. This was a trick. By then they knew about us. A new law came out
later. Those countries that were friendly with the Germans, should take back
their Jewish citizens from Belgium to their homeland. Otherwise the Germans would
deport the Jews. The Consulate Associate who dealt with these cases was named
Kelemen. He used to shout at the unfortunate Jews.
We heard that this or that friend was dragged away. But
we never thought that they were taken to the gas chambers. Such a crazy
barbarism never existed on the earth before. The liveliness was hard for the Jews
in hiding. How did we stay alive? My parents, brother and I often ventured out
to the flea market. We bought used clothing. We turned the cloths out, and from
them we made linings for women's purses and bags. Because Jewish purse makers
could not get new materials to line their purses, they were happy if we
delivered them our home made purse linings. Then we cut gloves from all kind of
discarded clothes and blankets. We sewed the gloves on our sewing machine.
Someone bought the gloves from us. Where the gloves went, we did not know it
yet. But later on we learned that these gloves were delivered to Buchenwald concentration camp. These gloves were distributed among poor prisoners
in concentration camps and forced labor camps, so the work would go better
outside in snow and freezing temperatures. Our hands were freezing anyway,
because our ragged gloves were ruined fast, first at the fingertips, while we
were carrying stones and bricks to construction sites. At that time when we
sewed these gloves for living, we did not know yet where and to whom they would
be delivered. We lived in constant fear. But we were still free. We heard here
and there, that someone was taken. A lot of people were dragged away at night by Nazi savages and Gestapo bandits. We moved to another
place. We went hiding. We moved to a furnished apartment, while we kept our old
apartment and paid the rent for it. Then we committed a grave mistake. Deadly
mistake. Our poor mother said that she was afraid of being in our new furnished
apartment. We heard that the Nazis were taking Jews from next-door buildings.
It was October 1943. So my poor parents and my younger brother moved back to
our old apartment on Rue Planten. My wife and I went back to live on the same
street. Maybe a neighbor saw us going home and informed the Gestapo. Maybe they
came for us because we were registered at a Belgian City Hall in Anderlecht for this home address and the Gestapo extracted our
address. We were registered there as Jews. But it is more likely that someone
reported us to the authorities, because on that very night when we moved back,
we woke up hearing loud knocks on the door. People were shouting and banging on
our door with rifle butts, and demanded we open the door immediately. If we
would not open the door, they would break it down, for sure. My wife and I, we
got really scared and opened the door. These murderer gangsters rushed in.
There was a Gestapo guy in military uniform, but there was another Gestapo guy
in civilian cloths with a gun on his belt. They shouted at us: "Police
alamand!" This means German police in French. And they shouted "Deutse
policei! Karte d’identite", meaning "German Police! Identification
Cards!" Scared as we were, we presented our ID cards with stamp imprints
JUDE JWIF. We also showed them a document issued by the Hungarian Consulate a
few months back which stated that as Hungarian citizens we can't be deported if
we show this paper.
Earlier, this document was honored, but now they did not
let us go. The Gestapo guy in military uniform read our names and said,
"Komt mit", meaning "You come with us." I asked,
"Varum." "Why?" The Gestapo in civilian clothes gave out a big
yell. We got even more frightened. He told to my poor wife that this was the
end for us. We had to follow our brothers and sisters, who were already dragged
away. We started to pack, crying. They let us pack our things, because they
knew that they would take all our valuables. We were yelled at to hurry up,
because our father and mother were already waiting down on the street. They
would come with us. Now we got even more frightened. These murderers wanted to
take our parents and my younger brother, too. Meanwhile, another bandit dressed
in military clothing came in to our apartment; with his hand on this head. He
showed the other Nazis how much luggage were packed by my mother and my younger
brother who were waiting downstairs in a car driven by this Nazi. We were
pushed down the stairs, my wife and me, and then we saw again my mother and Józsi,
my younger brother. Both of them were very frightened. The Nazis pushed us into
the car. One of the SS lifted our house key and told us that they would give it
to the Hungarian Consulate. They started the car and took us to Avenue Louis. We
stopped in front of the Gestapo building. We got out there and took our luggage.
A woman's shoe fell off, and I tried to pick it up. The civilian Gestapo guy hit
me on my face with all his force. Another SS soldier pushed us down into the
Gestapo basement. All unfortunate Jews captured by these Nazis were kept there
in this basement. Some people were brought in earlier, their names were written
with pencil on the wall. I found my dear brother-in-law's, Kálmán's signature. He wrote: "Learn to endure and to
suffer. Kálmán Goldberger". We stayed in this basement for a few days.
From here, they took us to a collection camp in Malin. This camp consisted of empty
military barracks. The Nazis prepared it well in advance to hold Jewish people
here and later transport these unfortunate souls to Auschwitz or other concentration camps.
After our arrival, we were led into a large room, where
we lined up. Tables were set up where we had to give up our money, jewels and
all other valuables. My poor mother had a golden watch and beautiful diamond earrings;
she had to give up everything. My poor wife and I, we stood further back. Our
line moved slowly ahead. At the tables, they shouted at us, “If you try to keep
anything valuable, we will punish you”. I had false teeth. I put one thousand Belgian
franks under my false teeth. But as we approached the tables, I saw someone was
beaten up badly. I also saw that they removed the false teeth. I got really
frightened, of course. They would beat me up if they find the money. So I
chewed on the money as hard as I could, and when they were not looking, I threw
it under a wardrobe. We gave them all our money and jewels at the table. They
hanged a letter "Z" on a string around my neck. This stood for "Zürick
halten", meaning "Held Back", because we belonged to another
country, Hungary . But Hungary did not let us Jews back into our homeland. At the
end, the German Nazis deported us too, in the same category with Turkish Jews,
who had letter "Z" around their necks, too. Polish Jews had a green
card hanging from their necks, as I remember, the capture on the green card
said "Displaced". These people were very depressed. They knew that their
future would be the worst. Auschwitz and total destruction would wait for them. Later we
were directed into a large room, where we put down our luggage. SS guys yelled.
There was a young Jewish man in the room. He was our room supervisor. They
called him "Stubedinst" in German. It was organized who would clean
the steps. We slept on the floor; we covered it with some clothing. We peeled
potatoes. We ate green pea soup, which was sent by the Jewish Council from Brussels . At that time, the Jewish Council still existed, but
they reported to the Germans.
Germans did everything, including extermination of Jews, in
a very well organized way. During the daytime we walked in circles in the courtyard.
Gypsies arrived from France , but not as many of them as Jews. Whenever they
marched in circles in the courtyard, the Jews were not allowed to go down to
the courtyard. We only saw them from the windows. They played their violins
beautifully. We were in Malin for approximately seven weeks. Then it was
announced that all people with the letter "Z" were to be transported
from Malin, first the men, then the women. We all cried. The men were lined up
on the courtyard. I could not even say good-bye to my mother. She came out to
the courtyard and shouted to me "Béla, Béla", but a soldier hurried
to her and pushed her back inside the building. I never saw my poor mother
again.
We, the men, with my father and younger brother and a lot
of other people were taken to Brussels on a big truck. We went back to the basement of the
Gestapo building. We stayed there for a few days, only the men, including my
father and my younger brother. The women with the letter "Z" stayed
in Malin. They were transported later to a female camp in Ravensbruck. Few days later they took us all men to Garde Nord Railway
Station. Civilians circled us there. We boarded on an empty train. When our
train left the station, uniformed SS Nazi soldiers came in. We just sat there,
very frightened. Our train reached the German border, and we stopped there. Uniformed
German Nazis came in and asked for our passport. It was just a mistake. A
German soldier coming with us from Brussels told them that we were "Juden", i.e.
Jewish. Then they left, and our train arrived to Germany . Through the window, we saw bombed-out houses. Our
train went ahead, and we arrived to a huge railway station. We got off. The SS
soldiers put up their iron helmets. They pointed their bayoneted guns at us, while
we were getting off the train. It seemed to me that they did not want anyone to
escape. Anyway, no one could escape in a foreign country and in a foreign city.
Then German policemen guarded us for awhile. There was a very frightened young
Polish Jew, who asked us if we were Jewish too. He was taken to Buchenwald , also. Some curious people, mostly women, gathered around us. One of
them had a small swastika hanging from the end of her headscarf. She said to
the others that we were Jews. A policeman started to speak in French. He
probably heard that we came from Belgium , and wanted to practice his French language skills.
Another policeman came to us later, shouting. Uniformed Germans arrived a
little bit later on, and they pushed everybody up onto the trucks. It was their
job to deliver the unfortunate prisoners to the concentration camp in Buchenwald and hand us over to the SS bandits in the camp. The trucks started to
leave with us on board. There was a young man among us, who spoke Hungarian
very well. His name was Oringer, and his wife came to Belgium from Austria . He spoke German well. He noticed that the road
signs showed the way to Buchenwald . He told us in Hungarian that they were taking us to
Buchenwald . We arrived there soon. We got off the trucks. The
was a big entrance gate, a huge iron fence, and a sign with big letters "ARBEIT
MACHT FREI" (Work sets you free). What kind of lie and deception that was
too! We experienced it later, that no matter how hard the prisoners worked
until total exhaustion, freedom never came from that. Clock on the gate tower.
Doors below to SS offices. SS soldiers were standing before the offices. They
shouted names. They shouted our names too. They read these names from a list.
And if I remember correctly, first they read my father’s name, Lébi Schwartz,
then mine, Béla Schwartz. I said "Ja wohl", and the SS soldier looked
at me. Then he read my younger brother’s name, József Schwartz. He said
"Hier". Then they read more names, names of Jews from Turkey and other countries, where they were not allowed to
return. When all names were read, SS soldier said "Let’s go". The SS
showed us where to go in the camp. We went to a disinfecting station first,
where we had to undress. They took our clothes and everything else. We were
standing there naked. Then we had to stand in front of an SS soldier one by
one. We had to bend down, pull our ass apart. The SS soldier looked into our
ass to see if we tried to hide something valuable in our rectum. They already
took everything from us, watches, jewels, money in Belgium , in the Malin collection camp. Now we had to stand
naked in front of other, younger looking prisoners. They held an electronic
haircutting machine. They cut all our hair from our head and body, from
everywhere. Then they sprayed us with disinfectants. From here, we went to a
storage room. We never saw again our clothes, neither I, nor my younger brother
or my father. We could keep our underwear, shirt and shoes. If you had glasses,
you could keep them, too. They gave us camp clothes. We looked terrible in
them. A stripe was painted on the threadbare pants. An X shape was painted on
the worn jacket. They gave us a ragged cap. Some of us got a striped, thin camp
coat. They sprayed some water on us, maybe to clean us. Then they gave us these
terrible looking clothes. It was a horrible Nazi trick. Nobody could escape in
these awful clothes. After all this, we had to line up and we were led to a
barrack. Some prisoners were already in the barrack. We were stopped in front
of the barrack. We had to stand there for an hour, maybe for more. It was a
very cold night. We were standing there in thin rags, we were cold, we shivered.
Then a civilian came out of the barrack and loudly said to us in German, "You
should know that you got to work here." Then they let us Jews arriving
from Belgium into this large wood barrack. This was not a Jewish
barrack. Inmates in this barrack were arrested and transported to Buchenwald because they did something against the Germans. They were mostly Polish
and German, to my knowledge. Only we, Jews were taken to the concentration
camps for nothing. This civilian man, whom I mentioned before, was the blockleader.
In German, "blockalteste". He was a prisoner too, a German man. Maybe
he was not faithful to the Nazis, or he was brought in for some other reason to
Buchenwald as a prisoner. Here, he became good enough for the
Nazis to keep an order in the barrack, to be a blockleader, a
"blockalteste". After a long wait outside, they begin to let us into
the barrack. They gave us a camp badge to sew on our chest. This badge was cut
out of a red cloth. Red cloth meant political prisoner, although we were not
political prisoners. We were taken to Buchenwald only
because we were Jews. They gave us a small yellow cloth that meant we were Jews.
We sewed this yellow rag on the red rag. The red and yellow rags together
looked like the Star of David, so whenever the Nazis looked at us they knew we
were Jewish. This was dangerous itself. Then they gave us a long red ribbon
with camp number on it. Everybody had a number. Mine was 20631. The "Stubedinst"
gave us a needle and yarn to sew on the red and yellow rags. But the needle and
yarn was not right. I told the Stubedinst that it would be hard to sew it on
without proper needle and yarn. He looked at me and asked "Can't you sew
it on?" I said, "I can, but it is not easy." He said
"Geselt machen asztu gekent", which meant "But you could make
business deals, could not you?" He was a prisoner, but not a Jew. He hated
Jewish prisoners. So sad. We spent that night close to each other. Next day,
they escorted us to another barrack, to Barrack 22. This was a Jewish barrack.
The Blockalteste was a German Jew, who had been in concentration camp since
1939. His name was Emil Karlbach. He was arrested for his extreme leftism at
the time. He was strict with prisoners. There was an A section and B section. Toilet
and wash basin were in the middle. Barrack 22 and later Barrack 23 were Jewish
barracks. There were other barracks with other nations, other prisoners. There
were Russian, Polish, Gypsy, French, Belgian and German inmates. They said
there were about twenty thousand prisoners in the Buchenwald concentration camp. They transported prisoners from here to other
concentration camps, to Auschwitz and they brought prisoners here from other camps. Who
knew what these Nazis did! They had the prisoners work for them free. They made
them suffer. They squeezed out of them everything they could. They manufactured
guns, weapons and other military stuff. And they were constantly building
something. We carried brick, cement, sand, stone, wood and other construction
materials. In Buchenwald , the Germans did not tattooed a number on a
prisoner’s arm. We, the newcomers arriving from Belgium , were not allowed to work at the beginning for about
two weeks or a bit longer; they said we were quarantined for observation. Every
morning and evening we had to go to the Appel Platz. The blockleaders reported there
how many people were in the barrack, how many were sick. They counted everybody.
Every barrack stood separately. When a German or SS soldier came in with a book
or paper, the blockleader shouted "Attention! Hats off!" and reported
our number to the SS soldier. While the soldier made a note, we were standing
there hatless, in attention. When all barracks were counted for, we could go
back to our barrack. We had iron beds on the top of each other, the bodies were pressed to each
other. We lived in extremely bad conditions.
Buchenwald housed only
male prisoners and some mislings (Jews in mixed marriages, whose wives were not
Jewish). A misling’s wife could live free in Germany. There were also Polish
Jews. Mostly long term prisoners, who were kept for construction work in order
to build brick walls. They were young people. There was a German, non-Jewish Capo
in the camp. He was also a prisoner, as I heard. He was taken to the camp
because he was member of the Socialist Workers Party. His name was Zilbert Capo. He was an architect. The Nazis used
him in construction work. Even the Nazis listened to his advice, and he advised
the Nazis not to exterminate a certain number of young Polish Jews. He offered
to train them to build walls for future factories to be erected next to our
camp. These young men lived in Barrack 22. This Capo was not brutal. There were
more Capos and "Forarbeiters", meaning foremen in Buchenwald . They were not Jewish. We sat in the barracks around the table during
daytime. Every morning and evening we went for head counting. This observation lasted
for two or three weeks. After this observation period was over, we started to
work. We carried stone, sand, brick, wood to the construction site. The
Bauführer or construction leader, was an SS named Beker. He was a brutal Nazi;
he hit and beat up prisoners all the time. He wanted to finish this building
soon. They called this building S-midi. He shouted that S-midi should have been completed
already. Work was going on for months. They started to bring in equipment to the
building. Prisoners knew that the Nazis wanted to manufacture fo1 and fo2 bombs,
which could shoot very far. But not one was completed ever. When Buchenwald
camp was bombed later, this building and all machines in it were totally
destroyed. I think Americans dropped these bombs on the building.
We lived horrible times.
Freezing cold, starvation, fear and abnormal working conditions. My poor father
and younger brother suffered enormously. Very early in the morning, we went to
Appel Platz to be counted, then we marched throught the entrace gate to work, 4
or 5 people in a row, we marched as soldiers do. An SS with a stick in his hand
counted how many people went out. Everybody had to keep the pace. To march
better, a wind and percussion band stood at the road side and played the beat.
In the evening on our way back to the camp, they played again, so the Nazi SS with
his stick could count us, wretched prisoners returning from forced labor easier.
It was one of their tricks. They could claim that they even provided music for
prisoners. Former anti-Nazi musicians were transported to Buchenwald, and
recruited into this wind and percussion band.
Old people died fast. Young
ones, too. Bitter cold, starvation and fear killed people. A big crematorium
chimney was burning with big flames, dead bodies were burned to ashes in huge
iron furnaces. A lot of people died of diarrhea. We had few physicians, also
prisoners, in the so-called "Rever", but they did not help us much. Dead bodies were carried
from here to burning furnaces all the time. Once, my stomach started to hurt at
work, and I had a diarrhia. What did I do? I found a piece of burnt charcoal
under the snow, I cleaned it with snow, scraped off the dirt and began to chew
it, chew it, until it helped me a bit. I also gave it to others. I gave a piece
of charcoal to chew to my poor good friend, Stern. It healed him, however, he
was taken away by a later transport. He never returned. To my best knowledge,
his wife and little son did come back from Ravensbruck female concentration
camp. Later, I ended up in Rever with diarrhea. The older son of Belgian
Epstein died in diarrhia next to me.
Not everyone had shoes, a
lot of people wore wooden slippers. It was bad for the feet and body. Life was
a horror in Buchenwald. Once, we were inside the gate coming back from work,
and we already started to run to our barrack, then near Appel Platz we noticed
a swing-like thing. When everyone arrived there, we saw it was not a swing, but
gallows; the Nazis wanted to hang someone there. The SS announced on the
loudspeaker that interpreters must step forward. The interpreters were
prisoners, too. The SS said in German, that this and this prisoner tried to
escape (he told his name) or he actually escaped, but they captured him.
Therefore this prisoner would be hanged in front of thousands of people. Soon
they escorted this unfortunate man there, and the Nazi SS hanged him to the
hook. The cord was already around his neck. I am still shivering, when I think
about this event. Of course, by the time the wretched man was hanged to the
hook, nothing was under his feet. He went up on a little ladder, but they took
it already away. He just hung in the air. His hands were tied, and they moved.
His face became very red. But he still moved around a bit. Then his face turned
gradually paler. And by the time life left his body and he suffocated, his face
was colorless, pale, and dead. They left him on the gallows for some time. Then
he was cut off and taken to be burned in the crematorium.
In Buchenwald, Nazi SS
soldiers were able to call every barracks on the phone from the gate or from
the SS offices. Mostly, they phoned blockleaders if they wanted something
special, for example to see a prisoner with this or that number at the gate. And
who knows what happened to that prisoner! Or often our barrack loudspeaker
announced that a blockleader needed to go to the gate immediately and fast. Blockleaders
were prisoners too, but they spoke perfect German. They were chosen by Nazi SS
soldiers. They were tough people. In the barracks, they issued the orders.
Our blockleader was a
German Jew. In July of 1944, maybe on the 20th or 21st of July, I do not
remember exactly when, we were inside the barrack, in Barrack 22. Our barrack
loudspeaker started to announce the news. It seemed that they forgot to turn
off the loudspeakers when the SS listened to the news in their office. But then
we at the Barrack 22 heard from the loudspeaker as the radio announcer said
that Jews attempted an assassination against Fuhrer. Then I said to my poor
father and younger brother, "Now we are in trouble.
Now the Nazis will kill all of us, Jews." I think we were all
very frightened. But it seems that the Nazis learned that the assassination attempt
was planned by a colonel named Stauffenberg. At a meeting he put down his
briefcase with a bomb close to the Fuhrer’s leg. This time bomb was set to
explode in an underground map room. It would have been more powerful there, and
probably it would have killed everyone. But suddenly Hitler changed his mind
due to the heat or his usual mood changes. Immediately before this meeting he
changed the meeting place to a light wood barrack at the edge of the forest.
Here the explosion was not as powerful, compared to an underground explosion.
And, as we know, Hitler stayed alive. He suffered only superficial injuries. The
conspiracy against Hitler was unsucessful. But Hitler’s retaliation was successful.
He executed everbody who was suspicious. Most of them were brutally hung, a lot
of them were shot in the head. Everything would have been different if this
assassination would have been successful. So many people would have stayed
alive. But now the Nazis were able to extend the war as long as they could. And
they managed to exterminate huge part of the human race.
Let me mention how these
Nazis managed to fool the whole world. They pretended that they were paying for
our work. For a while they even printed camp money, so they could pay us,
workers. They paid two or three marks. This money was without value. "Buchenwald Concentration Camp" was printed on the money. You could not buy anything
with it. There was no place where you could buy anything. We saw a house-like
thing, they said it was the Heaftling Cantina for the prisoners to use. But who
would dare even go in that direction? The SS would probably shot him dead on
the spot. A Nazi one-armed civilian craftsman shouted to the prisoners "Ich verde zein un the auscalung" from time to time, that is "I will be there on payday", meaning if you do not work fast enough, you won’t get any money. Any
worthless money. Later on, they did not even bother to hand out this worthless piece
of paper. We kept carrying bricks, construction materials, cement, stones,
sand, and tried to go as close to the kitchen of the civil craftsmen as it was possible.
These craftsmen were free German men, who wore armbands and came to work to
Buchenwald. The refuse dump was next to their kitchen. I carried a piece of
stick with me and scratched the top of the pile. Sometimes I managed to find a
piece of lettuce or a bit of carrot. It was good against the hunger.
As I mentioned, Buchenwald was not exclusively a Jewish camp. Only a few
percent was Jewish. Barracks 22 and 23 were excusively Jewish, but Jews and
non-Jews worked together outside the camp. There was a father with his son, a
non-Jewish prisoner. I can’t say anything bad about the father. We worked
together for awhile. We carried bricks, cement, stones and other construction
materials side by side. Once I lugged a paper bag on my back, which contained
cement. As you know, cement will harden if it is mixed with water. He and his
son also dragged something. There was a little bridge, with water underneath.
When we stepped on the bridge, well, his son pushed me into the shallow water
with the cement bag on my back. Then he called out to the Nazi SS soldier. "Her posten ther juden machen szabotage". "This Jew sabotages work". I was lucky. The SS soldier did not shoot me in the head.
He saw this man’s cruelty.
In Buchenwald, Germans
manufactured weapons, guns, pistols, some stuff we did not know about. Machines
bore gun barrels. We built weapon factories. We had to remove hills and dirt to
make the ground even. I guess they wanted to build something there. I worked at
Rusztung Colony once. I had to drag wood logs to future building sites. They
build scaffolding from them. We carried construction materials and bricks there.
The builders stood on the scaffolding, and they cemented the bricks in their
place. After awhile, I was selected to work somewhere else. They started to
build a massive, strong building. They used a lot of cement, they poured big
cement holes. We carried big cement plates. Mostly German craftsmen lead the
work there. They were not prisoners. They came in wearing a stamped armband,
and after work they were allowed to go home. Old timer prisoners from Barrack
22 were their helpers. They build brick walls. They cut cement plates with
axes. German SS soldiers came in occassionally and they were talking to German
civilian craftsmen. We learned that they were building a large high voltage
electricity plant, because they did not have enough electricity for their
factories etc. Prisoners from other barracks also worked here, non-Jews,
Germans, etc.
At that time, in 1944 we
often had air raid warnings. Airplaines flew above Buchenwald, probably they
flew to bomb Germany. They were English
or American airplanes, or maybe planes from another country. At the beginning
we had to work during air raid warnings. Later, at the sound of sirens, we had
to run to our barracks. Everybody to his own barrack. If the air raid warning
was cancelled, then we had to go back to our work site. Once it happened that my
poor father and I, we did not hear that the raid was cancelled, and everybody
already ran back to work through the entrance gate. We were frightened, and
asked Jozef, who cleaned the barrack, for advice. He told us to go to the gate
and report at the SS soldier for work. I told my poor father that it was not a
good idea. Everybody already ran back to the work site, the gate was closed;
the SS soldier would beat us to death. Or shot us to death. So we decided to
stay in the barrack together with the inside people until everybody returned to
the camp. When everybody had to go to head counting at Appel Platz, we'd go
too. Then our problem would be solved. And that's how it happened. Air raids became
more frequent. The Nazi leadership then decided that all prisoners had to run
to the small forest nearby at the sound of the siren. After the danger was
gone, everybody had to hurry back to the work site. Some German prisoners also
worked there. They suggested that we hide in a big hole we were building there.
We put some hay-like wood stuff (which they used to protect fragile things) on
ourselves. Since SS guards disappeared during air raid warning, we could rest a
bit in this hole. When the siren stopped, we climbed out of the hole and
started to work. We did it a couple of times. I worked under a foreman then. We
met there in the morning and each of us went to the construction work from
there. This foreman was a German, to my knowledge he was brought to Buchenwald because he did not want to carry weapons for religious reasons.
One morning I left our
barrack in my ragged clothing, with a tin plate on my stomach. An ugly cap was on my head, its vizor was torn. I hurried to the building
that we were constructing then, which supposed to be an electric plant. To my
knowledge, if we met an SS soldier during work hours, we did not have to greet
him or yank our cap off. As I went, I saw two SS soldiers standing there. One
of them was German, he told me to approach him. I knew at once this meant
trouble. I yanked my cap off. The German soldier asked me why I missed greeting
him. The other soldier did not say a thing. I think he was Polish SS. I told the
German, that we do not have to greet soldiers during working hours. At this
moment, he hit me in the face with his fist, and then he hit me again. I was
lucky that he did not hit my eyes. I fell down. When I got up, I started to cry
while I was heading to our work site. There they asked me what happened, why I
was crying. I continued to do what I had to do, carried cement plates and other
stuff. Around 10 o'clock or half past 10
or 11 o’clock maybe, a siren started to blow. Through the window, we saw few poor
prisoners running to the small forest. Of course, we agreed to hide in the
hole, and cover ourselves with a straw-like material. And as no SS would be around,
we could rest a bit there. We hid in the hole. I hid there too, but suddenly I
looked out and saw that there were a few people still running to the small
forest. I thought, well, I better run to the forest. And I was out of the
building in a flash, and started to run to the forest. Somebody shouted at me,
why I was not running faster. As I looked back, I saw the SS soldier who beat
me up in the morning. He asked me to come closer. I went to him, and he hit me again
telling me to run faster. I arrived at the forest, crying bitterly. I lied down
to the ground. I was extremely tired, I fell asleep. I do not know how long I slept.
I am sure it was not much. When I woke up, I heard big explosions. Huge smoke
swirled towards the sky. I heard loud noises. This was a big air raid. Big
factories and buildings next to Buchenwald
concentration camp were all bombed to the ground. I heard loud moaning and
wailing nearby. Some men lost a hand or other body parts, some men were lying
in blood. After huge bombs few smaller firebombs were dropped, and they tore
off the prisoners’ body parts. Those who were not caught by the firebombs,
started to run. We ran out of the concentration camp area. Any other time they
would have killed us for this crime. But now, during air raid, the SS soldiers did
not do anything against us. We met an SS officer, and he directed us back to
the camp area. The air raid now was over. A lot of small firebombs hit the
small forest. The big Factory No. 10, where the gun barrels were manufactured,
was completely destroyed. A Romanian SS soldier, who otherwise was very brutal
person, died there. He could have hid, but he was such a patriotic person, he
kept guarding Factory No. 10 during the air raid. Smoke was rising from the
ruins everywhere. Numerous dead and injured were on the ground, many
unfortunate prisoners were wailing. SS soldiers were wailing too, they were also
injured in the air raid. Some of us, who accidentally survived this raid and
were not killed, had to carry the injured SS soldiers on stretchers to the SS
barracks, and put them down on the beds. There was an SS doctor in bloody medical
coat. We, prisoners were allowed to enter to the SS barracks only in order to
carry in these injured SS soldiers. If we would go there for any other reason,
they would have shot us to death. Those SS soldiers, who we carried on
stretchers, used to beat us up or tried to kill us, but now they called us "friends",
or "my friends". You got to think about this. Would they become cruel
SS soldiers again after their recuperation? The prisoners’ barracks were not
bombed. My poor father worked inside and he stayed alive, only his nose hurt. The
next morning, we went out to work again to clean up the ruins. Bekert, the Nazi
SS construction leader came and saw with big eyes how the building he built with
prisoners’ slave labor was totally ruined now. The electric plant building
disappeared from the face of the earth. Nothing was left of the building where
we worked before, just one huge and several small holes in the ground. Not a
single matchstick remained. Those poor people, who climbed down the hole to
rest during air raid, disappeared all without a trace; not even a single strand
of hair remained from their bodies. If I did not jump out from that hole in the
last minute and run after other prisoners into the woods, if I stayed there, my
fate would have been the same. I would have been gone. Not even a single strand
of my hair would have remained.
We started to rebuild the wall again. Nothing came out of
it. The wall fell down. There was no sand left for the construction. We filtered
dirt through a big iron sieve, and tried to use it instead of sand. Before the
air raid, there was a lot of coal. Coal was needed for everything. After the
bombing, the coal was burning and smoking for weeks or even months. It was on
fire. We saw the Germans did not have coal. Bekert, the Nazi SS construction
leader was gone. He was transferred or something else happened to him, but we
never saw him again. He was replaced by a one-eyed SS construction leader.
He was not as brutal and cruel as Bekert, or maybe he saw
that the end was near. Once he selected few younger prisoners from those men
who had shoes on their legs instead of wooden slippers, and could run. He
selected me too to be part of this transport commando. We learnt later that
this was a dog commando. We had to get up earlier. Nazi SS soldiers circled us.
Each held a trained vicious dog by chain or rope. These dogs could tear apart
any prisoner on the SS soldier’s command. We went outside the camp, farther
away from Buchenwald . They started to build houses for SS Nazis. Big
tucks delivered stones, bricks, sand, pebbles and other construction materials
there. Some SS houses were ready and lived in. We peeked into a house and saw a
young woman. A man came out in SS uniform. There was a big SS letter in a frame
on the wall. Maybe they showcased their Nazi beliefs with it. From our Jewish
barrack some old timers came along with us. As I mentioned earlier, they were
trained to build brick walls. They came from Barrack 22. Our job was to help
them by carrying all necessary building materials to the site. All kind of
prisoners worked together there. Once they told me and Jozef to grab a
wheelbarrow and bring very small pebbles, so called broken stones to them.
Jozef and I did so. I never had any problems with Jozef. He slept in the Polish
barrack, because he was arrested for some anti-Nazi activities, and I lived in
the Jewish barrack. An SS soldier stood close to the broken stone mound. There
was a small pile of red bricks nearby; it represented the concentration camp boundary.
No prisoner was allowed to step over the red brick pile. If it happened, the SS
soldiers were allowed to shoot him down. I was not thinking about this. I was
just in a hurry pushing my wheelbarrow to the broken stone mound in order to
get more broken stones. And Jozef was pushing his wheelbarrow. The area was deserted;
nobody was there, just me, Jozef and the SS soldier. The prisoners were not
allowed to address the guards at all. Nobody ever addressed the SS guards. It
would have been a deadly mistake. I saw that a guard stood nearby resting his
rifle on his shoulder. With one hand, he was holding a brown dog. Jozef looked
up to the guard and addressed him. My blood froze in my vein. He said to the
guard "Her pasten" and pointed at me, "Jude", meaning I am
Jewish. The guard looked at me and started to shout, "Eszt gibt nach Juden
en Deutsland", meaning "Are they still Jews in Germany ?" And he said something to his dog and pointed
at me. "Du hunte iz a Jude", meaning "Dog, this is a Jew".
But somehow the dog did not attack me, did not tear my ragged cloth off my body.
Then the SS started to push me towards the red brick pile in order to throw me
over the camp boundaries, so he could claim I wanted to escape. Then he could
shoot me. I thought, "My end is here. This SS guard would kill me. It does
not matter anymore what I do or what I say. I am finished." Then I jumped
in front of him, very close. I opened my ragged clothes on my chest and shouted
loudly to him to shoot me now at once. He will liberate me from all my
sufferings. He can only do me that favor. I do nothing but suffer, although I
never harmed anybody. I shouted at him very loudly in German that the only
reason I was there because my father was born Jewish. My mother was not Jewish.
(I just said it. The truth is that my mother was Jewish also.) The SS said
"Du Jude wir wellen gevinen der Krug aber wir wellen werloren?"
meaning "Jew, will we win or loose this war?" I shouted back, "I
do not know. Maybe you’ll win. Maybe you’ll lose." Then I realized I was
not shot by the SS soldier. So I shouted to him, "Her posten Das is meine
arbeit stelle lazinzi mich
arbeitern", that is "Let me continue my work, this is my
workplace." And I ran to my wheelbarrow and began to shovel broken stones
into my wheelbarrow. When it was full, I ran straight back to the other
prisoners, who were building the wall. Jozef pushed his wheelbarrow, too. He
did not say anything to me. I did not say anything to him. But when Jozef and I
arrived to the wall, I asked him. "What happened there? Why did you betray
me? Did you want me to be killed?" Other bricklayers, majority of who were
Jews, told me that my story could not be true, because Jozef was a good man.
They did not believe me, since Jozef was a prisoner, and Jozef was suffering, too.
Well, you can ponder about it. He talked nicely to bricklayer Jews. He acted as
a good person, because it was his best interest. But deep inside, he hated the
Jews. And he would have been happy to see a Jew killed. In the evening I
approached the deputy barrack leader, he was a German Jew, and asked him to
help me somehow. I felt, in this dog commando, they would kill me sooner or
later. And I told him what happened. His advice was to stay with my previous
group tomorrow morning, after the head counting at Appel Platz. I did exactly
that, nobody said a word. After that I kept working at the construction site
around the camp, removing the rubbles. I spent only two weeks or little more at
the dog commando, I do not remember exactly how long I was there. One day I was
selected to work with other prisoners at the officers' houses which were
destroyed by bombs. There were no more bombings in Buchenwald , they tried to fix the officers’ houses. During the air raid not only
the factories were destroyed, but the officers’ houses as well. Only smaller
firebombs reached these houses. Prisoners' barracks were not bombed at all.
First we have to put the Commander’s house in order. The Commander’s name was
Piszter. He was the leader of the Buchenwald
concentration camp. Who knows how many murders he ordered? If he was chosen to
be the leader of the Buchenwald concentration camp, he must have been a high ranked
SS Nazi officer. Who knows what kind of mass murders was he guilty of? We had
to bring in some furniture to the Commander’s house, and take out some other
stuff. There was a painting on the wall, Hitler's picture. "Der este
grossze tag" meaning the "First Big Day" when Hitler was elected
in 1933. This was the First Big Day for the Commander. For us, it was the day when
our life was destroyed. In two or three days, the Commander's wife was also at
the house. She was a small brown woman with a little girl, who was around 4
years old. Their maid was transported from the Ravensbruck camp, where my mother
and wife were held then. The maid was also a female prisoner and a servant to
the Commander’s family. We were still working at the Commander’s house, when
one rainy day I was mixing some cement and noticed that the Commander's little
daughter was jumping in a dirty puddle. What should I do? If I let her jump,
the SS guard will break my bones. If I take her out of the puddle, it means
trouble too, how could I touch the Commander’s daughter? Well, I decided to
take her out of this dirty puddle. I went to her and lifted her up. At this
very moment, her mother came out of the house and took her out of my hand. "Danke",
she said. "Thank you". So I got away without any trouble. I went to
get more sand, and I saw a highly ranked SS officer walking with his dog. It
was rumored among the prisoners that his house was destroyed by the bombing,
and his family was killed in the air raid.
Then we worked at other
houses which were ruined by the bombing. There was a not so young Nazi SS who
loved to hit the prisoners, to slap them in the face. When we gathered to march
to work, he was shouting. And he yelled like a dog ... wuff...wuff. Someone yelled
back ...wuff..wuff. He was looking around who was that person, but he could not
find him. He used to shout that the first world war was lost because of the
Austrians, and we would loose this war because of the Austrians, too. Another
Nazi’s face became red and started to shout that this war was caused by the
Jews, and the Jews caused every trouble, whenever he saw a poor prisoner who
had a red little badge and under it a yellow badge, because it meant that this
prisoner was a Jew. Such a fanatic Nazi! He was totally wrapped
up in Nazism and Hitler, and he was shouting all this nonsense. We were
especially afraid of this crazy Nazi SS, because he was fast to hit, strike or
kill. There was an SS in Buchenwald, who was, if I can say so, friendly to us
Hungarian-speaking Jews, but only because he was a Romanian SS. He did not
speak German, only Hungarian and possibly Romanian. He came to us several times
and talked to us in Hungarian. He asked if we had a watch. Of course, we had no
watches. The Nazis took it from us. This SS was possibly from Transylvania, a
part of Romania where Hungarians lived then. He was glad to speak in Hungarian.
Once he came to me at work, I was shoveling dirt then, and he started to talk
to me in Hungarian. I told him, "Mr. Engineer (we called
him Engineer, I do not know why), do not come to me please, because the German
SS will beat me up or maybe he will kill me, because I talked to an SS soldier". He said that he could talk to anybody, because he was
an SS too, and nobody could give him orders. And he said something else, and
then he walked away. The minute I turned around, there was another blond SS
guard and asked, "Was haste geret
mit hhe SS man", meaning what I talked about with this SS man. I yanked my
cap off my head at once and stood in attention. I replied that the SS man came
to me. "Well, I’ll finish you off", said the SS guard in German. "I’ll
send you somewhere with a transport and you’ll never come back." He took out
a pencil and paper and wrote down my number. My number was 20631. This meant
death. Prisoners were sent to such dangerous places that they never returned or
they died or they were killed. I started to cry. What could I do? In a few
moments, the SS guard came back and told me that he would not send me away, instead
he would kill me right there. Then he ordered me to take the shovel into my
hand, lift it up above my head and exercise with it. Lift the shovel above my
head with my two hands and bend my knees up and down all day, until I collapse.
These were his own words, "until you collapse". He sure meant it. A
starving, much suffered man could not go on with this exercise from morning
until the end of the day. And if I collapse, he would order someone to take me
to the crematorium to burn my body. How could I do this, with my shovel up
above my head and bending my knees, up and down, all day, until the end of work
day? How could I do that? I was young, barely 31 years old. The SS guard was watching
me, I could not stop. After this affair, I hardly saw the Hungarian-speaking
SS.
Let me mention again the SS overseer, who loved to beat up and hit the
prisoners. Some Buchenwald prisoners wore red trousers. They were real Germans,
they spoke with a German accent. It is possible that they did not want
faithfully serve Hitler anymore, so they were taken to Buchenwald as prisoners.
When this SS, who loved to hit and yell, saw a German prisoner in red trousers,
he ordered him to come closer, and he asked him, "Was bisz tu?"
"Who are you?" The prisoner stood in front of him like a soldier and
replied: "Ich bin ein Reich Dajcse". "Du biszt ein Reich Dajcse",
and he forcefully slapped him on the face from left and from right. I think the
word Reich Deutsche meant German Empire. But where was the German Empire by
then? Russians were advancing. Americans, English men and other Westerners were
bombing Germany . Germans were pushed out of France and Belgium , and from other Western countries. Forces advanced
in order to occupy Germany . Everybody was talking about the end of war. It
seemed to be near. Few prisoners in Barrack 22 had German, Christian wives, who
lived free in Germany . They sent newspapers to their husbands. We learned from those
newspapers what was happening in the world. The Germans did not write the
truth. But between the lines you could figure out what was going on, where the
war was heading. One of these prisoners, whose wife lived free, asked his wife
in a letter to send him some clothes. Maybe to put something on when we would
be free again after the war has ended. But the SS guard told him, "Do not
think a minute that you will ever go home from here." Time went by. We still
had to work. But the work was pretty useless by then. We had to do it anyway.
The prisoners suffered, died, and they were burned in the crematorium. Some
prisoners were transported to other camps, some people were sent to Auschwitz . There was a man with his young son, who spoke French very well. His
wife was in Ravensbruck, and she survived the war. He and his young son came
with us from Belgium . I remember him; he was a very good man. His name was Ganzo, and his
son's name was Albert. Maybe such a young person had a little bit better life
then we did. There was fresh air. They were growing. But one day his father
told me between tears in French that Albert died. We felt so sorry for him. He and his father were swallowed by death, they never
went home. I think they were Turkish Jews. The construction work continued. At
the bricklayer site my father cleaned the cement between the bricks with an
iron. He did it so nicely; you could tell which row was his work. Once we had
to pick up broken glasses and other trash from the bombed out area facing the
road. And then an SS unit marched singing to the military barracks. They were
singing in Hungarian. One, two, one, two... they marched. I knew that song by
heart at once.
BOOK 3
The Germans seemed to know that
they were losing the war. Once, the SS guard who loved to yell, started to scream,
"We lost two World Wars because of the Austrians, World War I and this war."
However, the Hungarian speaking SS told us, one night in the SS garrison, that SS
soldiers talked about a secret weapon which could win the war for the Germans
in the last minute. Of course, this was a fantasy. They manufactured only small
guns. The civilian masters tried the new guns out by shooting into small stone
piles; however, there was not too much enthusiasm on their faces. We went to
work in the spring mud. The deputy construction leader walked by, but he did
not say a thing. We dug holes, in the holes we inserted those cement poles
which held electric wires before the bombing. Now these poles were on the
ground. Our work was useless. The construction foreman named Sontag told the
prisoners to build a wall. We carried stone, brick, cement, and other stuff,
but somehow nothing came out of this. The American Army began to move from Belgium to Germany . We, prisoners, were talking about our future
freedom which could not be too far now, if the Germans would not kill us first.
It was rumored that Piszter, the Buchenwald Concentration Camp Commander, said
that he would not empty the concentration camp; instead he would surrender to
the American Army. He told so to our camp alteste (elder). This camp alteste was a prisoner, too. He was German, and he had a red
sign and a number on his coat. He was arrested and brought into the camp for
anti-Nazi activities. He helped the Nazis to maintain order. He even had a dog.
I can’t say that he was brutal.
The Commander stated that he would not empty the
concentration camp, but he did the opposite. They organized a death transport.
Unfortunately, I fell into it. My poor father was killed in that death
transport. My younger brother reached Dachau with a transport, and he was set free there. I was
set free in a forest on a hill. The SS murderers pushed us, still alive
prisoners into the woods. As I remember they even pointed guns at us in order
to kill us. But then we heard gun fire in the forest. It came from American
soldiers. The SS murderers seemed to be scared; they knew that the American soldiers
were really close. Then ran away and left us prisoners, who were still alive there,
because they did not have time to shoot or kill us. The gun shots would have
been loud, and these SS murderers might have thought that if they shoot and
kill us, the American soldiers would hear it and capture them easily.
Our death transport lasted about three weeks, maybe two
or three days less. I am going to describe our death transport exactly as it
happened. I think it was the cruelest crime ever committed on the earth against
innocent people. Speaking a little bit more about our last days in Buchenwald , we still went to work and they still counted us on Appel Platz. But we
already knew that after Belgium fell, cities of Achen and Cologne were under American occupation. Moreover, as I remember,
we ourselves heard some shots in the distance. The front line drew closer. We
still went to work for about two days. Then next day around noon, they lined us
up and we went back to the camp. The Nazi leadership already knew that this
work could not go on anymore. We lined up at Appel Platz. People started to
talk that we were going to be freed soon, that we would have the world. That's
what other prisoners said, those, who were still alive. As we stood there, the
Jewish Barrack 22, Szepl started to talk. Szepl was the right hand for Emil,
the Jewish blockleader. Szepl was a German Jew, a prisoner. He said,
"Forswind!" "Scram!" At this point, we and prisoners from
other barracks started to run away from Appel Platz. Where did we run? We ran
down to the Little Camp, which was an even more devastated place. My poor father and my younger
brother ran there, too. Prisoners of Little Camp lived among terrible
circumstances. Awful diarrhia prevailed. Death was everywhere.
How could we ran away
before head counting? Because the Nazi
SS soldiers did not want to do head counting anymore. It was the blockleaders’ job
to count the unfortunate prisoners and deliver them to the SS murderers, who
gathered around the prisoners and organized the death transports. Most of these
unfortunate prisoners were killed during death transports. In Little Camp,
where we stayed, camp overseers began to gather around the barracks in order to
deliver us to the SS soldiers who lead these death transports. My father and I
jumped out of the window, and ran. Where did we run? Suddenly I saw a French
overseer leading my father and another poor prisoner to the death transport preparation
site; we learned about its function later. My father saw me and turned to me saying,
"Come with us, my son. Everybody has to go." Poor father, he did not realize
that he was going to his death. Another day, they began to push people out of
the barracks. I made a deadly mistake again, as I let them push me out of our
barrack. Once outside, I saw that I was in big trouble. SS soldiers stood
around us, and we were taken to the evacuation area. We became part of a death
transport. The SS soldier hit me hard on my back and said to me in German, "Aren’t
you an old timer?" When we looked to the other side, we saw a lot of
people in the hilly forest, a lot of prisoners; at some places we saw rising
smoke. We could see it from a distance. It looked like they were roasting
something. But what they were roasting, I did not know. I was not there. But I
am sure that SS soldiers, Nazis, did not bring any meat there for the prisoners
to roast. Then what was it? Well, we can think about it.
Already too many of us were squeezed together, a lot of
non-Jewish prisoners also. Then they pushed us out of the main gate, and armed
SS soldiers gathered around us. Hungarian speaking SS Nazis were among them,
too. We saw that we were in a lot of misery. These armed SS soldiers were there
to kill us. Some people wanted to run back to the camp. I saw a poor man lying
on the ground, a small red sport was visible on the middle of his forehead. He
still moved his head a bit, to the left and to the right. They shot him in the
head a few moments ago. He probably tried to escape. The big crowd started to
move. We had to go. Armed SS soldiers were all around us. In residential areas
even civilian guards were walking with us on both sides, with light guns. As we
marched, we saw potato and kohlrabi skins dropped on the dirty road. I do not
know why the local Germans threw dirty, muddy potato skins on the road. So we
wretched prisoners could eat something? Or did they throw these dirty, raw
potato skins in front of us because they hoped we would die from it even
sooner?
We approached the big railway station in Weimar . We arrived; they put us in big cattle freight cars.
The freight cars were crowded. And the train left, and went, went ahead taking
us away. There I saw a friend named Kláber from
Barrack 22. He was a Hungarian Jew, but he lived in Germany . He was deported from there to Buchenwald together with his father. His father died before they arrived to Buchenwald . There were different type of prisoners in the wagon, Jews and non-Jews
alike. In another open freight car, I suddenly spotted my poor father. He told
me, "Do not come here, my son. They will distribute some bread here".
He meant, in his wagon. He probably thought that I did not belong to his wagon;
therefore they would not give me any bread there. I would better off if I go
back to my own wagon, and receive some bread there. This was the very last
moment that I saw my father alive. I have not seen him again. Even in this
minute as I am writing these words, my heart aches. I can hardly withhold my
tears.
I went back to my own freight car, and indeed, they started
to give out some bread. In that very minute bombs started to fall. We had to
jump out of the wagons. A lot of wagons burned down. Our transport was bombed
from airplanes. From the air, our death transport looked like an ordinary
military transport. If they knew that we were unfortunate concentration camp
prisoners, they would not have shoot at our train. After the bomb raid was
over, SS soldiers started to yell at the prisoners, "Back to the freight
cars!" A lot of prisoner died, some was injured. I saw with my own eyes that
these SS soldiers who were shot in the head all those injured prisoners who sat
on the ground or could not stand up. The SS had a revolver in his hand and shot
all injured prisoners in the head from behind. I was also looking for my freight
car along with other prisoners but somehow I did not find it. They all looked
the same, some were burned out. By then an SS escorted us and told us to go to
the death wagon if we couldn’t find our wagon. At the end of the transport we
had a death wagon; it contained only dead or killed people. We were told to
jump up into this wagon, if we couldn’t find our own wagon, but those who
jumped in, were instantly killed by the SS. In that wagon only dead people
could travel. The SS took us along other open wagons, and then I saw a prisoner,
and I recognized him from his mouth upwards, and I said to the SS, "Her
posten iche ware in dem vagone." The SS asked the young man in German and
pointed at me, whether I was there in that freight car. The lad nodded with this
head, yes. Then the SS told me to jump up into this freight car. I jumped and
indeed, since this was my previous wagon. This young man saved my life. If he did
not stand there and did not nod with his head, then the SS would have killed me
in the death wagon. Our train started to move. I did not see my poor father anywhere.
The train went ahead with us prisoners. I nibbled on a little piece of bread
which I managed to get at the moment when the bombing started. When we jumped
out of the wagon, I hid the bread in my trousers, so no one could take it away
from me. I do not know how long we traveled on the freight train, I do not
remember exactly. It stopped finally, and everyone got off. A lot of prisoners
were there. I looked for my father shouting "Dad! Dad!"
Unfortunately, I could not find him. Then came the most
horrible minute of my life. I met Lajos Veizer, son of a cutter in Kisszekeres, and he told me, "You could have
saved your father if you would have stayed with him." My heart ached. Why
did not I stay with him! But he sent me away. He told me, "My son, do not
come here now. They will distribute bread here." Then suddenly the
airplanes appeared dropping bombs on us, and we jumped off the train. I could
not even find my freight car easily after the bombing.
Since then, several years went by, but I can say this much,
that my heart still cries for my father. He was such a good man. He suffered a
lot in his life. In World War I, he was prisoner of war in Russian captivity in
Siberia . I remember an old post card that he sent us from Irkutsk , Siberia . And during the first years following World War I, in
the twenties and thirties, it was especially difficult in Hungary to make a living. That’s why he went to Belgium around 1930. But when the Germans occupied Belgium in 1940, everything was ruined.
Well, as we got off the freight train, Nazi SS soldiers
started to move us. The human brain cannot understand the cruelty I am about to
write now. A little boy, a Jewish boy, who was around six or seven years old,
was lying on his back on the ground. He was crying terribly. Why? Because an SS,
whom I saw before shooting the injured prisoners to death who were not able to
go back to their wagons, that same SS held a revolver to the kid's temple. He
did not pull the trigger yet. He was waiting. He was enjoying the agony of this
child and his terrible fear. The little boy was screaming awfully. The SS
enjoyed it fully before he killed this innocent kid. Isn’t it terrible?
As we marched we saw Germans with small carts loaded with
all kind of stuff, they looked like refugees. There were very sick and starving
prisoners among us who became too weak to go on. They were killed instantly by
the Nazis. Another transport from Buchenwald marched
before us. A lot of prisoners were killed in that transport. We could see
bodies of murdered prisoners lying on both sides of the road. I saw an
unfortunate prisoner who tried to march on crutches, but was not able to
continue. The SS wrote the prisoner’s number on the prisoner’s arm or hand. I
did not actually see the SS shooting him, but I am sure that was his fate. We
marched on. They escorted us. It was a bitter cold April. We shivered in our tattered
clothes. Some people screamed, "Gun us down now. Why do you torture
us?" In a German village people threw cooked potatoes towards us. I lifted
up my threadbare cap. A small cooked potato fell into my cap, but a prisoner
next to me snatched the potato out of my cap. At the end, I got nothing. We found
wild sorrel leaves at the road side, I ate it. Later on, we marched along wheat
fields. Green wheat, sown in fall, just started to grow. I tore it off and
started to eat it. Not like cows. I put the green wheat into my mouth and
chewed on it so long that it disintegrated and slid down into my stomach. Some
people among us looked young and healthy, but they said they would not go any
further, because these Nazis would kill us anyway. And they jumped head first into
the ditch. Of course, the SS immediately shot everybody who jumped out of the
line. There were young lads from Transcarpathia who spoke Hungarian, and I begged
them not to jump aside. I told them there might be a way to be saved. But they
just jumped and they were killed. Once we marched near a wooded area, the road
lead that way. A young prisoner sat down between the trees to relieve himself.
The SS saw him and said to him in German, "You wanted to escape." And with his rifle butt he hit this young
boy’s head so hard that he collapsed on the ground and quite possibly he died
there. They threw him up to a cart pulled by other prisoners. Most likely this
boy was already dead when they threw him up onto the cart. A Hungarian speaking
prisoner addressed an SS guard, because he noticed that the SS guard spoke
Hungarian. He asked him, "Where do you take us?
How far?" "Until you die."- was the Hungarian speaking SS guard’s
answer.
We were marching further. Then we noticed that we were approaching
a concentration camp. This concentration camp was called Flossenburg. Even before
we arrived to the gate, they started to shout, "You have too many lice.
Throw away your clothes. You will get clean ones inside." This was a big
lie, too. I threw away certain things, because of the lice. But I had a small
blanket; I wrapped it around my waist instead of throwing it away. Then we marched
into the concentration camp. We went in a large hangar, an empty building which
was used to build airplanes or something like that. They distributed some bread
in the evening. We slept in one or two empty barracks; they were awfully
crowded. Very early in the morning, someone came in to the barrack and said,
"Jews, wake up! You go with a separate transport." I was thinking
about staying behind with the others, the non-Jews. But then I got up. Some of
the non-Jews kicked me, I remember it. The big Jewish transport was set up, and
we marched through the big gate again, down to the railway station. Then we,
Jews, climbed up into a freight train. A German woman who lived close to the
railway station took small bowls from some prisoners in order to give them
water. A high ranked SS soldier saw this from the street and told the SS to
write down the woman’s name who offered water to the prisoners. The SS shouted
back to the high ranked officer, "Her Haubtman, can we give back the bowls
to the prisoners?" The officer did not say yes or no. Then the SS or
Wehrmacht soldier gave back the bowl to the prisoner. The train started to
leave with us, poor Jewish prisoners. There was a man in the wagon from
Szatmár. He found out that somehow he was a remote relative of my family. He
spoke very intelligently. I listened to him. The wagon was extremely crowded.
We fought for air. Someone poked my hand and it got infected. This wagon was
not an open freight car. It had a big door and a top; they could shut someone
there if they wanted to. They were talking about giving us some bread. I
started to cry and scream, but of course, we did not get any bread. This
wretched train just chugged along with us, Jews. An armed Nazi SS also traveled
in our wagon. I guess there was an armed Nazi in each wagon. Then our train
stopped and they yelled at us to get off. The unfortunate prisoners started to get
off. In our wagons, some people started to get off. Then the guard told us, "If
you want, you can get off. If you want, you can stay." A prisoner from Szatmár
and a few others decided to stay, thinking they would have more free space on
the train. They would have more air. I also began to cover the floor with my
clothes, as they did. By now, only those were in the wagon, who wanted to stay.
The SS began to close the doors. And as I accidentally looked at the SS soldier’s
face, I saw a very ugly smile, a hidden laughter on his face. At this moment I
realized that SS soldiers had never been so gracious as to let us decide
whether we want to stay or to go. This SS tricked us. Behind closed doors, he would
kill us all who stayed in the wagon. The doors were almost closed, but there
was a tiny crack open. I jumped fast at the SS, and then jumped out of the
wagon, down into the crowd. The SS threw a stone after me from the wagon; he probably
was angry that he couldn’t kill me. My friend from Szatmár and others stayed in the
wagon. I am sure that the SS executed them all after closing the doors.
Prisoners lined up below. My injured hand hurt badly by then. The punctured
injury site got swollen, it oozed pus. SS soldiers were yelling. They hurried
the crowd. I showed my swollen hand to an SS, how much it hurt. He yelled at
me, "It will heal eventually". As we begin to leave, I spotted a small plant
along the road. I knew it sucked the pus out of the body. I put some of this
little plant on my injured hand. It helped. My hand slowly began to heal. I put
this small burdock like plant on my hand several times. The SS took us through
small villages and empty fields. At night we slept in a woodsy area. We saw
dead bodies on both sides of the road along the empty fields everywhere. These
poor prisoners belonged to another transport marching ahead of us. What
happened to those poor prisoners who were shot in the head by the Nazis? The
American army and other liberation forces could not see those dead bodies,
because they were buried along the road in a big hurry. The SS sent two or
three prisoners into the village to bring some turnips for us. Horses or cows
used to eat this type of turnip. We got little pieces to eat. They did this only
one time. We drank water from streams, using our cap. The SS once stopped us in
the middle of a village. Few SS soldiers went into a shop. A well dressed older
gentleman came out and asked one of the SS soldiers outside, "How far are
the Americans?" I did not understand the SS soldier’s reply. This SS
lisped a bit. I remember him well. And I remember that this SS committed
terrible murders at night two days later. Another day in another village, an SS
gave us a cooked potato; he poured it into our ragged cap. The house was empty,
someone left the potato there. I was very hungry, and I ate the potato with skin
on. After that, we continued to march at night only. During daytime we stayed
in the woods. The SS soldiers were also afraid. After giving out the potatoes,
the SS ordered us to march only in the dark. It was cold. A little blanket that
I took with me from Buchenwald , was wrapped around my waist. Now I took it off and
put the blanket on my head. I do not know if this was the reason or something
else, but an SS grabbed me and pulled me out of the line. He told me in German
that I would pull a small cart with another lad. This small cart had the SS luggage
and packages. It was not easy to pull, but there was a small rod across. I
pulled it on one end of the rod, a young Polish Jewish lad held the other end,
that’s how we pulled this small cart. It was pitch dark at night. It was
horrible. We heard SS soldiers shooting. These shots killed people. As we
pulled this small cart, we saw blood and dead bodies in front of us. Our block
was Block 4; we pulled this small cart at the end of the Block 4. I was very
tired. The poor Polish Jewish lad, who was pulling the cart with me, was also exhausted.
It was night time, and to hear those deadly shots affected me greatly. I did
not know what to do. I had no chance to stay alive. I become embittered. A lot
of SS soldiers were around us. I addressed an SS soldier, "Her posten
bitte shön toskense mich osz." "Please let someone else pull this
cart for now". The SS said, "Du Jude bistu nüde?". "Are you tired, Jew?" "Jahwol,
ich bien zehir müde." "Yes, I am very
tired." "Leig dich" "Lie down." Well, if I lie down,
he will shoot me without hesitation. What am I going to do now? I was not
allowed to talk to an SS. This SS guard would not let me live. I had to do
something. And I did. It was night time. It was cold. My little blanket that I
brought with me from Buchenwald , was wrapped around my waist. I put the blanket on
my head and suddenly ran away from the little cart. But not to the side. I ran
ahead into the crowd. To the other prisoners. If I jump to the side, the SS
shoots me to death immediately. The SS was searching for me, he was shouting,
but he could not find me. At night all prisoners looked the same. If he would
have found me, he would shot me, that's for sure.
A young man among the prisoners asked me where I came
from. I told him I was deported to Buchenwald from Belgium . He told me he lived in Antwerp . I told him I was a Hungarian Jew. He told me he was
a Polish Jew. I told him that my brother-in-law lived in Antwerp , his name was Hendler. He was a good looking, tall,
younger guy. His wife Helen, my wife’s sister, was a beautiful, pretty redhead.
They had a beautiful little daughter, Magdi. Unfortunately, the Nazis deported
them from Antwerp . This beautiful woman, my sister-in-law, and her
beautiful daughter most likely perished in the gas chambers of Auschwitz. And
what I just heard from this young man from Antwerp felt like someone stabbed me in my heart with a
sharp knife. He said that my brother-in-law, Hendler, was shot to death in this
very death transport. How horrible! It was night time. We marched on a country
road along homesteads, fields, barren lands. It was pitch dark. Shots were
fired everywhere. They were shooting at poor prisoners. Wherever we went, we
saw blood and dead bodies in front of our feet. A poor Jewish prisoner ahead of
us attracted my attention, he spoke fluent German, and begged for his life to
an SS. He was probably a German Jew. The SS said, "Halt de schnocen", "Shut up!".
The SS was lisping a bit. I recognized him at once hearing his voice. This was
the same SS I mentioned earlier, who went into the shop to buy something. And
this SS, after saying very loudly, "Halt de schnocen", fired into
this poor Jewish prisoner, who spoke German well. The poor prisoner was
silenced. His blood flowed onto the ground, and he died. Who knows how many
more prisoners died by the hands of this and other SS soldiers? We, prisoners,
did not have any chance for survival. We did not even know where we went, where
we were taken. Next evening a heavy rain started to pour. Few prisoners were
allowed to go into a barn, where the farmers kept hay and straw. We lied down
at once on the straw in our wet, soggy old tattered clothes. Before we went
into the barn, I heard from someone that Buchenwald was liberated a few days
ago. Americans arrived to Buchenwald , and the majority of those prisoners, whom the Nazis
did not have time to haul away, were already free. A prisoner accidentally overheard
an SS talking about it, and the news got around.
But we were still in the Nazi hell. I remember that a
Nazi gave us each a potato at this straw covered place. In the morning, when
the sun was up, the SS soldiers started to yell "Line up!" We prisoners
still alive, did not know what was going on. Are we going to march again at daylight?
We started to look for Block 4. Then the SS soldier shouted again, "Sajsze
Block 4!" It did not matter anymore where we line up. Some prisoners tried
to hide in the straw. I was thinking about it, too. Maybe, I could escape. But
the SS began to poke the straw here and there with his bayonet. Well, I thought,
he would poke me and kill me at the same time. What could I do? I went outside,
lined up with the others who were already waiting for us in order to leave.
Among those who poked the straw, I recognized the Hungarian speaking SS
soldier. He was poking diligently in the barn, as I joined to the marching
column. We began to march. It was very bright morning already. It seemed that
something was very urgent for the Germans. I covered myself again with my
blanket that I took with me from Buchenwald . Another
prisoner from Barrack 22 wanted to take it away from me. I did not let him, he
could not take my blanket. Then suddenly, the SS grabbed me again and pulled me
out of the line, to pull the cart loaded with SS luggage. Well, I went to the
cart. There was nothing else to do. Two of us began to pull the cart.
At that time, I was sure I was finished. It was not night
time; I could not run away into the crowd. The SS would see me and shoot me. I couldn’t
pull the cart either, because I did not have any strength. What was I going to
do? I could pull the cart for half an hour maybe, then I'd fall and I'd be shot
in the head. But as far as I has a clear mind, I would not sit down or lie
down, because it meant instant death. I was thinking about my poor father. He
was a religious man. And he said that suicide was a sin. I thought my life
could last only another half an hour. In front of us there was a little hill
with trees. I had to climb up on the hill with the other lad while pulling up
the cart. I could not move my legs. Pulling up a cart loaded with luggage was
out of the question. An awful feeling overpowered me at the bottom of the hill.
I was scared of dying.
Suddenly we felt that our cart loaded with luggage became
very light. It became light because one or two SS soldiers started to push it
upwards on the hill. They knew that we prisoners were not able to pull that
cart up the hill. And it was urgent for them to be up on the hill as soon as possible.
The little cart seemed to move by itself. We kept our hands on the cart rod.
And the cart moved well, since the SS soldiers pushed it with all force. They
had strength. We arrived to the top of the hill. The SS soldiers shouted,
"Everybody into the woods! Push the cart under the trees!" It looked
like they planned to kill us all in the woods. They lifted up their weapons.
But in the same moment we heard faint sounds from gun shots in the same forest
on the hill. The SS soldiers knew that those were the American military forces.
I saw that the Hungarian speaking SS soldiers' hands were trembling. The SS did
not have enough time to pick up their luggage. They left all of their luggage
and ran away. The probably did not kill us because they did not have enough
time. The American soldiers might have heard the gun shots, and they might have
captured these SS soldiers easily. So the SS rather ran away and left us prisoners
there. The prisoners took slices of bread or a pair of shoes out of the luggage
abandoned by the SS. Some prisoners took a blanket. Most of the prisoners said
in Yiddish, "Mö zemer fráj". "We are free." I was in a very weakened
state. I felt awfully sick. When I saw the SS stuff in the hands of the
prisoners, I started to cry, and said, "When the SS will come
back, they will kill us because you took their luggage." Stronger prisoners suggested that we go down
to the nearest village, "We are free." And they started to go. Then
we saw the American soldiers. One soldier asked me in Yiddish, "Where did
the SS go? Where are they?" I could not tell. They ran away so fast.
Another American soldier gave me a sugar cube. I kissed his hand.
The ex-prisoners began to scatter towards the
village. We all went in different directions. I walked together with a Jewish lad from
Transcarpathia to find a village, but we were so weak that we had to sit down
under the trees. Then an SS soldier came by. He saw us; but we were lucky, he
did not kill us. He did not have a gun. He told us in German to go to the
village, we were free. He probably tried to follow the other SS soldiers. The
Transcarpathian lad had a small turnip. I told him, "Give me half of it.
In the village we'll have something to eat." He gave me a half, I put it
into my mouth and I started to chew. And slowly we went out of the forest, down
the hill. When we reached the bottom of the hill, we saw American trucks coming
on the road. I waved to them. An American soldier threw a can of beans to me
from his truck. There were small fires on the ground. I thought I would heat up
the beans before I ate them. Somehow I managed to open the can, and I put some
beans into my mouth. But they felt as if I swallowed stones. My stomach could
not stand food anymore. We continued walking. We found the village,
ex-prisoners walked on the streets in ragged clothes. We were sent to the
school building. The floor was covered with straw. There was a German with a thermometer
and he took everyone's temperature. Sick people were everywhere. In the
restroom an ex-prisoner, one of us, was lying on the floor. He was dead. He
looked somewhat healthy in the death transport. We were in the front line, things
were not organized yet. I put down two bricks in the yard to build a fire. I
found some wheat on the terrace, I cooked it. I got very sick from this wheat.
I almost died. Then the Americans took all sick people to clean rooms, where
uniformed American physicians worked. They asked how many times we had diarrhea,
they gave us medicine. They had a military nurse, too. This was not far from
the place where we were liberated. They called the location CAM; it was somewhere
close to Czechoslovakia . From there, they took us to Bamberg , a big German town. I stayed there together with Belgian
and French people, who worked in Nazi Germany. From here, they took me to the Bamberg City Hospital . There we got a clean bed with clean sheets and a clean
blanket. An older nurse came to my bed and asked my name. I told her that I
came from the Buchenwald concentration camp. She asked about my religion. I
was afraid, because I saw a newspaper from the Nazi times with a Jewish cartoon
on the window. I do not know why, maybe because of this cartoon, maybe because
it became a habit when I was asked about my religion, but I replied to this
older nurse that I did not have any religion. I saw her smiling. She probably
knew that I was a Jewish man. When she left, I slept. When I woke up, a young
man stood next to my bed. I noticed that he also came from the camps. He asked
me "Bisz tu a Jude?" "Are you a Jew?" , because he was a
Jew himself. I told him that I was a Jew, but somehow I was still scared here.
He said not to be afraid, they would not dare to do anything with me. The next
day a young German doctor came in. He behaved well; he took an X-ray picture of
my chest. He called me Herr Schwartz. And there was a male nurse; he asked me,
what I needed. I told him that I had bad constipation, and if he could help me
with an enima. And he did. A uniformed American soldier came in. He was looking
for someone. He spoke Yiddish very well. Transports leaving to Belgium and France were soon organized.
Before I checked into the hospital, I stood in line for clothes.
We were told that they gave clothes to those people who were in concentration
camps. I was so weak that I approached that place sitting and crawling. I received
a pair of shoes and a khaki colored suit which was probably a military jacket. Before
getting the clothes, I gave my name to a man and told him that I was from the Buchenwald
concentration camp, and that I was deported from Belgium to Buchenwald. He asked
why I was deported there. I told him I was deported to Buchenwald with a Jewish transport, because I was Jewish. Then he told me angrily,
"If you were in the camp only because you were a Jew, then you can’t get
clothes." Then I began to cry. The war is over, but they still hated us and
discriminated against us, Jews. Then a woman, who was working at the cloth
table told him on a soft voice in German, but I still could hear it,
"American soldiers stay in Bamberg Garrison, which has a Jewish commander.
The Jewish people have a big voice now. So do not say anything like this. Give
some clothes to this man." And she ordered me some clothes. That’s how I
received the jacket and the shoes. In the hospital, a doctor and a male nurse
asked me, "How are you?" I asked the doctor to secure me a paper
stating that I am Hungarian and I lived in Belgium before I was deported. I wanted to go back to Belgium . My family lived in Belgium . The doctor got me this paper. Then I was discharged
from the hospital, I began to look for Belgians. I found a Belgian Committee
which organized a transport. This Belgian Committee asked several questions of me,
like where was the Garde Nord, the big railway station, and several other
questions. They wanted to be sure that I indeed lived in Belgium . I answered them correctly, because I knew. I lived
in Belgium . Then I went to another place, there was a Hungarian
doctor still in his Hungarian uniform, and a male nurse in Hungarian uniform. Several
people stayed there who wanted to go home. There were Belgian, French and
Polish people. They gave me vitamin tablets. An American officer came in once
and asked who wanted to go to Belgium or France . I put up my hand. Someone said, “He is not Belgian.
He is a Hungarian”. The officer just turned around. He did not say a word. Most
of the people, who stayed there, worked in Germany during the war. They managed to organize a Belgian
transport. We traveled in freight trains. We saw Belgian women at the Belgian
border. They greeted and treated us very nicely. Especially since I put my Buchenwald camp number (my number was 20631) on my military
jacket. I spoke very little French. Whatever I knew, I forgot it in the
concentration camp. These women thought I was Flemish, since several Flemish
speaking Belgian lived in Antwerp who
did not speak much French.
Finally we arrived to Brussels . I was deeply moved. First, I went to the street,
where we lived when the Nazis dragged us away at night. I went down into the
grocery shop, where my wife and I used to shop. This grocery shop was very
close to our apartment. When I opened the door, the shop owner looked at me, but
he pretended he did not know me. He turned his head away. I saw immediately
that his man did not want to recognize me. He really proved to be an anti-semitic
person. I hurriedly left the shop. It was right there where we used to live. Strangers
lived in our apartment by then. A female neighbor, who had a coal and wood shop,
recognized me and told me to go to Rue Broyere. "Shon father" and "Shon
mather", that is my father-in-law and mother-in-law, were living there. I
thanked her and slowly went to Rue Broyere. This street was very close. I
knocked on the door. They opened the door and we hugged and kissed each other immediately.
They were crying, and I was crying. They said Racu (we called her Racu, otherwise
her name was Terézia), my wife was alive and she was
in Sweden ; she was expected to come home soon. People came to
visit me. They were frightened as they looked at me. My weight was around 40 kilograms.
Dr. Titelbaum, our doctor visited me. He told me that he would give me vitamin
injections. I remember he gave injections to me often. Then I did not put on my
jacket with the camp number any more. I got a decent jacket. I remember, my
brother-in-law, Dezső gave me this jacket. They survived the war in Belgium. He is not living
today, neither his wife, Rózsi. They died in Israel. Then after a few days, my
wife arrived from Sweden. What a great joy it was! We
cried a lot. She was in the Ravensbruck concentration camp. She gave birth to a
boy under abnormal circumstances. The child unfortunately lived only for 2
weeks. My poor mother was in Ravensbruck, in the female concentration camp. The
Nazis killed her in Ravensbruck or somewhere else. My father had a niece in
Belgium, her name was Ilonka Klein. She survived the war together with her
children in Brussels, Belgium. Her husband was Ármin Klein, he was dragged away
by the Nazis at night. He never came back. Ilonka Klein visited me later, and
gladly announced that she received a letter from my younger brother, Józsi from
Hungary. He was in Hungary. He was liberated in Dachau, and he was trying to
get back to Belgium. Later he arrived to Belgium. We were so happy when we
finally saw each other. He lived with us some time in Belgium. My other younger
brother, Miklós never came back, he was killed in the war. We still have a
postcard from him. He sent it from a Hungarian labor camp to Belgium, to my
poor parents' address before the Nazi
Gestapos dragged us away. I have a military picture of him, where he poses as a
Hungarian soldier. Erzsike Weiss, my poor niece sent this picture to me from
Israel. Erzsike alone survived the Ravensbruck concentration camp from her
family. She died in Israel from breast cancer. It was a beautiful family. Uncle
Izidor, Aunt Fánika and seven children, and a lot of grandchildren. They were
educated, the two older boys graduated from high school. The father, mother and
seven children all were killed. The Nazi madness killed them. The only one who
came home was Erzsike. She died from breast cancer. My poor father-in-law was
always crying, he was waiting for someone else to come home from his family. He
was waiting for his only son so much. He was sitting at the window all the time
and he was looking outside. Maybe somebody he would come back. But nobody returned
home. He said to my wife, "My daughter, did you lock
the door already...? Maybe somebody will
come?" And he was crying. All this crying made him very weak. He got ill, and a year
later after the end of the war he died in Brussels. I felt so sorry for him. My
heart still aches as I am thinking of him. He was a very good man. My poor
mother-in-law, poor Mom, her life was so hard. Her life would have been so
different if we would not have had this terrible war. She could have lived
together with her children. Once, an electrician was working at our place in
Brussels, and he came in. This electrician somehow survived Auschwitz. I
remember, he told us that he was deported with my poor brother-in-law, Kálmán
from Malin to Auschwitz. He told us that my poor brother-in-law died in
Auschwitz due to suffering and starvation. Poor Mom overheard this and her face
got distorted from the pain. The electrician asked whether she was poor Kálmán’s mother. We said, yes. Then he told us, he had no
idea. He would not tell us anything about poor Kálmán’s death in front of his
mother if he knew. Poor Mom suffered a lot in her life. She died in 1972.
I feel so sad. I am an old man. I am very depressed. My
heart and my soul weep. My heart cries for my family. My heart cries for my
wife’s family. My heart cries for my people and all other nations who perished
in concentration camps and death transports.
I arrived to the end of this very sad story. I tried to
write down everything as it happened.
Béla Schwartz
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