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Man who claimed to have escaped Auschwitz admits he lied for years
The Guardian ^ | June 24, 2016 | Alan Yuhas

Posted on 06/24/2016 9:06:55 PM PDT by Trump20162020

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To: Skooz; alexander_busek

It was the name of a book, written by a camp survivor, it was long ago when I read it. He had survived, IIRC, two camps, Bergen Belsen and I think Auschwitz.

Now I’m going to have to go look it up. It was absolutely terrifying, sickening, and just practically tore the heart out of me to read.


41 posted on 06/25/2016 8:34:08 AM PDT by little jeremiah (Half the truth is often a great lie. B. Franklin)
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To: Skooz; alexander_busek

Well well, here it is:

https://www.amazon.com/s?ie=UTF8&field-keywords=Anus%20Mundi&index=blended&link_code=qs&sourceid=Mozilla-search&tag=mozilla-20

Anus Mundi: 1,500 Days in Auschwitz/Birkenau Hardcover – November, 1980

One review:

Anus Mundi—1500 Days in Auschwitz/Birkenau is a detailed and shattering view of life in the death camps of the Holocaust. Unlike the writing of Elie Wiesel, Jean Amery, and to a lesser extent, Primo Levi, which is deeply and movingly introspective, Wieslaw Kielar details the brutalities of life in the camps with a simple objectivity that is unsparing in its directness. In this narrative, we learn nothing about Kielar prior to June 1940 and nothing about him after his liberation of the camps four years later. We do know he is Polish Catholic who occasionally prays, but other than that the book is devoid of religious, philosophical or political overtones.

The dozens of camp vignettes that the author has accumulated in this book are as sharp as the eye of a camera: brilliant, detailed, focused and memorable. The closest comparison in style would be Borowski, Kielar’s tragic countryman. In each case, the strict lack of sentiment and intellectual elaboration serve only to heighten the horror and leave us with no doubt as to the authenticity of the recollections and their attendant suffering.

Although Kielar’s misery was unrelieved, for all its deprivations, his fate was slightly easier that that of the Jewish prisoners. This is in no way meant to be disparaging. Kielar suffered more than his share of harsh blows, severe winters, starvation and infestation with lice and fleas. Although not a Jew, for Kielar, too, the brutalities of the sadistic Kapos were never far away. His memoir records a long season in hell that would have destroyed a lesser man.

Amidst this suffering and degradation, however, Kielar reveals that contacts with the civilian world outside of the camp were still possible for him, that he was entitled to receive packages from home, that correspondence with his family took place with a certain amount of regularity and most of all, that he did not live each day in fear of the ovens and gas chambers which were reserved for the arriving Jews. Those Jews whose lives were spared suffered a fate that proved, ultimately, to be harsher than that suffered by Kielar and the other Polish political prisoners.

This is an intimate and extremely well-written book about the horrors of the Holocaust and it contains a wealth of information. One must though, when reading, remember that there were qualitatively different orders of experience among the various inmates of the camps. Kielar could, at least, count on the fact that he had a chance of outlasting and overcoming the wretchedness. The Jews, however, were from the moment of their arrival, marked for certain death. If not immediately dispatched to the gas chamber, they were worked until death mercifully overtook them.

The acknowledgment of this distinction among the prisoners in no way detracts from the vividness or the pathos of Kielar’s memoir of his 1500 days in hell. We must read and remember each survivor’s story for its own unique reasons. In Kielar’s case, the reasons are compelling enough to make this a first-class memoir in the annals of Holocaust literature.


42 posted on 06/25/2016 8:37:25 AM PDT by little jeremiah (Half the truth is often a great lie. B. Franklin)
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To: little jeremiah; Skooz
Indeed! "Anus mundi" (German: "Am Arsch der Welt"; English: "The anus of the world" / "Out in the boondocks") is indeed the title of this book. It's so-called "kitchen Latin" - i.e., a joke.

Regards,

43 posted on 06/25/2016 1:01:26 PM PDT by alexander_busek (Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.)
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To: Trump20162020
In the spirit of coming clean....

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

I was never there.

In fact, I never have even gone backpacking.

44 posted on 06/25/2016 1:04:56 PM PDT by Yaelle (Make America Safe Again)
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To: Beowulf9

What a story.

We lived near two wonderful people, he was a cantor in our synagogue before he got too old, and they had both (husband and wife) been in Auschwitz. What tzaddikim (holy ones) those two were, or are, if they are still living.

My grandfather was in Buchenwald.


45 posted on 06/25/2016 1:08:09 PM PDT by Yaelle (Make America Safe Again)
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To: WKUHilltopper

I lived in Europe so long I still make my 7s with the slash in it. I stopped curling the 9s though for some reason.


46 posted on 06/25/2016 1:09:32 PM PDT by Yaelle (Make America Safe Again)
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To: Yaelle

Reading your comment about your grandfather, and the cantor and his wife, makes me hate the holocaust deniers even more than I already do, which is hard because I hate them so much already.


47 posted on 06/25/2016 1:39:49 PM PDT by little jeremiah (Half the truth is often a great lie. B. Franklin)
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To: Trump20162020

Fake but accurate.


48 posted on 06/25/2016 1:48:20 PM PDT by MUDDOG
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To: Yaelle

What those people went through.


49 posted on 06/25/2016 9:46:22 PM PDT by Beowulf9
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To: Beowulf9

I’ve read this several times, it really affected me as I, like you, tried to understand how she dealt with those memories

It also brought back memories from a holocost denier named Herb who was a scum who used to maliciously interfere on amateur radio when he disagreed with those who ran traffic for missionaries. This nutcase used to find other nut cases who were also Nazi like deniers

Those who don’t understand the lessons of history will repeat them. One of the dangers today is that the Islamic nut cases hate the Jews more than the Nazis did. Sure, the Muslims kill infidels in Paris and Orlando but they really want to see blood flow in Israel. And we have a guy named Hussein in the White House who tries to hide it was Muslims who kill in hate attacks


50 posted on 06/26/2016 5:25:31 AM PDT by politicianslie (What would a terroristdo if he were made POTUS? ANS: Exactly what Hussein Obama is doing!)
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