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The liberation of hell
Jerusalem Post ^

Posted on 01/25/2005 4:17:53 AM PST by IAF ThunderPilot

When they were young, they fought the Nazis, and then bore witness to the extreme depravity of which human beings are capable.

Now in or nearing their 80s and 90s, the Allied soldiers who liberated the concentration camps of Europe are recounting their memories of the horrors. Approaching the January 27 anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz, many of those still living feel an urgency to testify about what they encountered.

Anatoly Shapiro, 92, has never forgotten what he saw at Auschwitz on January 27, 1945. That was the day Shapiro, who says he was the first Russian officer to enter the infamous concentration camp, led his battalion to liberate it.

In an interview Saturday in his apartment in the Coney Island section of Brooklyn, he sits alongside his wife, Vita, his tall, thin form upright and his eyes are clear as he describes, through a translator, the things he still sees in nightmares 60 years later.

"We saw German soldiers, and when we opened the gate, we saw one barrack, then the next, on and on for a hundred barracks," he recalls.

"When I saw the people, it was skin and bones. They had no shoes, and it was freezing. They couldn't even turn their heads, they stood like dead people.

"I told them, 'The Russian army liberates you!' They couldn't understand. A few who could touched our arms and said, 'Is it true? Is it real?'"

As a commanding officer, his task was to direct his men. Half his battalion, originally 900 men, had died in battle. But nothing they had endured had prepared them for what they found inside Auschwitz.

His men pleaded with him to let them leave.

"The general told me, 'Have the soldiers go from barrack to barrack. Let them see what happened to the people,'" he says.

He ordered them to accompany him, and they went from barrack to barrack. He remembers, "In German, it said, 'damas,' – women. When I opened the barracks, I saw blood, dead people, and in between them, women still alive and naked.

"It stank; you couldn't stay a second. No one took the dead to a grave. It was unbelievable. The soldiers from my battalion asked me, 'Let us go. We can't stay. This is unbelievable.'

"We went to the barracks for men; it was the same as the barracks for the women. People... were naked, or [had] just thin clothes, no shoes, in the freezing cold; it was January. Only a few people could talk; they didn't have energy. But a few people were able to talk, so slowly. [They told us] once a day they got a little water, no bread, no anything. If someone died, they took the clothes, to get a little warmth, anywhere. They died from hunger and cold.

"I was shocked, devastated."

Shapiro remembers two barracks for children.

"Outside it said, 'kinder.' Inside one, there were only two children alive; all the others had been killed in gas chambers, or were in the 'hospital' where the Nazis performed medical experiments on them. When we went in, the children were screaming, 'We are not Jews!' It turned out that they really were Jewish children and were afraid they were about to be taken to the gas chambers."

He remembers the Russian Red Cross trying to feed the people.

"Immediately they started cooking chicken soup, vegetable soup, but the people couldn't eat because their stomachs were like" – instead of using words, he shows his clenched fist.

After the Red Cross had removed survivors, Shapiro continues, he directed his soldiers to begin cleaning the barracks to prevent disease from spreading.

Because of the repression of Judaism in the former Soviet Union, Shapiro says he did not know how many Jews the Nazis had killed until he learned that the figure was six million when he and his family immigrated to the United States in 1992.

Shapiro has been asked to speak after the president of Poland at the January 27 ceremony in Krakow commemorating the liberation. As it turns out, he cannot be at the ceremony, but he feels it is crucial to speak about what he saw so that future generations will remember. He is particularly gratified to be able to talk because he was not able to do so in the former Soviet Union.

"If I had spoken of what I saw, I would have been sent to jail," he says. "Today, I never forget what happened in Auschwitz and in the war to our six million, and to all [those who died at the hands of the Nazis]." Auschwitz was one of the first camps that the Allies reached, so the anniversary of its liberation prompts reflection by the liberators of other camps as well.

Marvin Josephs, 81, of Phoenix, helped liberate Ohrdruf and Buchenwald in Germany. As a master sergeant with Ace Corps headquarters, 3rd Army, Josephs's unit entered Buchenwald on April 12, 1945, with a military chaplain, Rabbi Herschel Schachter.

"Rabbi Schachter announced with a bullhorn, 'You're free,' and the survivors came and tried to kiss his boots," Josephs says. "They were emaciated, starving."

One man in particular, who said he had been a professor at the University of Prague, showed the camp to Josephs, the rabbi, and several other American soldiers. The tour included the crematoria and the home of the commandant and his wife, Ilse Koch, whose brutality earned her the nickname "Beast of Buchenwald."

"It was so terrible; it was hard for the mind to absorb it."

Shortly after Josephs's unit arrived, Gen. Dwight Eisenhower ordered the entire US 4th Armored Division to tour Buchenwald so they could see the Nazis' brutality.

"He didn't want people to ever deny what happened," Josephs says.

Eugene Cohen, 89, of Pittsburgh served under Gen. George Patton as chief investigating officer of Mauthausen, a conglomeration of concentration camps including Gusen, in Austria.

He supervised an investigating team of 13 men, including six interpreters and several photographers whose documentation was later used to convict Nazi war criminals, including Franz Ziereis, at the Nuremberg Trials.

He was among the first officers to enter Mauthausen in May 1945.

Cohen recalls that he and his men posted signs that read, "Maj. Eugene Cohen is here to investigate crimes against humanity."

"When the Jewish people saw the name Cohen, they came rushing to me," he recalls, tears in his voice.

Day after day, he and his men took depositions. His many indelible memories include the time, several days after he had begun his work, when his chief interpreter, Jack Nowitz, summoned him to hear a man's deposition.

"I saw a man sitting there and Jackie said, 'This man sitting before you was to die two weeks after we came to liberate the camp.' The Germans kept these things called tote books, in which it was marked down, who was to die on such and such a day. Here was a man who was to die, and he was living because we were there. This man came crying to me, and I cried with him."

Cohen says he felt a kinship with the survivors as fellow Jews, and a unique sense of purpose as a Jewish soldier documenting the atrocities.

"Of course, being of the Jewish faith, we did the best we could to get as much evidence as we could," he says.

At the Nuremberg trials, there were more war criminals charged from Mauthausen – based at least in part on the depositions he and his men gathered – than there were from some of the larger concentration camps. As recently as 2001, the FBI gained access to Cohen's personal records to gather evidence to support the deportation of a Nazi war criminal.

"We looked him up, and sure enough, he was there in my report," Cohen says.

"We're dying off now; there are only a few who witnessed what took place," he says. "The most important thing is never to forget."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Germany; Israel; News/Current Events; Philosophy; Russia
KEYWORDS: holocaust; israel; jews; nazis; wwii
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1 posted on 01/25/2005 4:17:54 AM PST by IAF ThunderPilot
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To: Convert from ECUSA; Laffalot; SJackson; Alouette; SirLurkedalot; yonif; anotherview; dervish; ...
Never forget ping


FRmail me to be added or removed from this Israel Defense Forces and Israel ping list. Here you will find news, articles and fascinating stories about the IDF and Israel.



2 posted on 01/25/2005 4:18:52 AM PST by IAF ThunderPilot (The basic point of the Israel Defense Forces: -Israel cannot afford to lose a single war.)
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To: IAF ThunderPilot

You would think these Soviet soldiers would be used to these kind of sights from their own "activities" in the motherland.


3 posted on 01/25/2005 4:23:47 AM PST by Chi-townChief
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To: IAF ThunderPilot

Thank you for posting this. Difficult to read, but we must be reminded.


4 posted on 01/25/2005 4:26:06 AM PST by SkyPilot
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To: IAF ThunderPilot
As I stood in the barracks at Dachau, looking out at the beautiful sky, I was half afraid to turn from the window, for fear that reality was a dream and that I would find myself an inmate in that hell.

Today Europe fears a recrudescence of that horror, and well she should. However, in inviting Muslim immigration, she is bringing herself inexorably toward the very horrors she most seeks to avoid.

5 posted on 01/25/2005 4:32:38 AM PST by Savage Beast (The internet is the newspaper of record.)
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To: IAF ThunderPilot
Thank you for posting this and a reminder of why we continue to search for those animals who have entered our country for a haven.

Let us continue to search, convict and deport.

6 posted on 01/25/2005 4:34:11 AM PST by OldFriend (America's glory is not dominion, but liberty.)
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To: Chi-townChief

Yes, the Nazi horrors shocked even the battle hardened men who had prevailed at Leningrad and Stalingrad.


7 posted on 01/25/2005 4:34:31 AM PST by Savage Beast (The internet is the newspaper of record.)
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To: IAF ThunderPilot
The [Russian] general told me, 'Have the soldiers go from barrack to barrack. Let them see what happened to the people.'

Gen. Dwight Eisenhower ordered the entire US 4th Armored Division to tour Buchenwald so they could see the Nazis' brutality.

So unlike today's Main Scream Media.

8 posted on 01/25/2005 4:40:31 AM PST by jigsaw (God Bless Our Troops.)
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To: IAF ThunderPilot

Oh come on man ...the Germans are weary of the whining! (/ bitter sarcasm)


9 posted on 01/25/2005 4:44:38 AM PST by DainBramage
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To: jigsaw
Gen. Dwight Eisenhower ordered the entire US 4th Armored Division to tour Buchenwald so they could see the Nazis' brutality.

We knew a man in the Veterans' Historical Society in Tulsa who was there when Buchenwald was liberated. He said Gen. Eisenhower told the men, "Remember what you see. In your lifetimes, there will be people saying this didn't happen."

10 posted on 01/25/2005 4:54:16 AM PST by Tax-chick (Wielder of the Dread Words of Power, "Bless your heart, honey!")
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To: OldFriend; SkyPilot

You are welcome


11 posted on 01/25/2005 4:56:41 AM PST by IAF ThunderPilot (The basic point of the Israel Defense Forces: -Israel cannot afford to lose a single war.)
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To: IAF ThunderPilot

There is so much first-hand testimony of what these places were like from people who were in them, and those from the Allied armies that liberated these places of evil. Yet there are those twisted people who claim these things never happened, which is beyond my comprehension. The evidience that these places existed and the evil done in them is overwhelming.

Never again.


12 posted on 01/25/2005 5:04:23 AM PST by Convert from ECUSA (tired of shucking and jiving)
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To: Savage Beast

My visit to Dachau was the most moving (not in a good way) moment in my life. I could never look at an elderly German the same way again. I always wondered, "What did you know? How did you help in this abomination?"


13 posted on 01/25/2005 5:09:44 AM PST by go-dubya-04
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To: go-dubya-04
My son served four years in the military stationed in Germany.

We sent our college freshman daughter to visit during the summer break.

She said she had a hard time looking into the faces of the older men, wondering what they had done during the war.

14 posted on 01/25/2005 5:19:55 AM PST by OldFriend (America's glory is not dominion, but liberty.)
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To: go-dubya-04

I was also shaken to the core by Dachau. However, I looked not at Germans but at people all over the world and wondered how can I love you knowing that you are capable of such as this. I looked into my own soul, and there was the answer.


15 posted on 01/25/2005 5:35:16 AM PST by Savage Beast (The internet is the newspaper of record.)
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To: IAF ThunderPilot

Thanks for posting.


16 posted on 01/25/2005 5:35:19 AM PST by Rummyfan
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To: dennisw; Cachelot; Yehuda; Nix 2; veronica; Catspaw; knighthawk; Alouette; Optimist; weikel; ...
If you'd like to be on this middle east/political ping list, please FR mail me.
17 posted on 01/25/2005 5:45:08 AM PST by SJackson ( Bush is as free as a bird, He is only accountable to history and God, Ra'anan Gissin)
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To: IAF ThunderPilot

My dad was there...1945...

As a boy in the 50's, I stumbled across a box with pictures...I got chewed out, big time...Over the years, I would get into the pictures...

Other than to say he was there, my dad refused to talk about it...

It was real...I saw the photos...


18 posted on 01/25/2005 5:45:50 AM PST by Iscool
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To: Chi-townChief
You would think these Soviet soldiers would be used to these kind of sights from their own "activities" in the motherland.

As of today there is still no memorial in Russia to the tens of millions of Soviet citizens who died in Stalin's gulags. Not one person has ever been brought to justice even though Stalin and his henchmen killed many more people than Hitler. At least the death of six million Jews is part of the public record- Stalin's victims remain just vague shadows in history that the Russians would just as soon forget.

19 posted on 01/25/2005 5:50:57 AM PST by Larry381
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To: IAF ThunderPilot


20 posted on 01/25/2005 5:52:49 AM PST by Drammach (Freedom; not just a job, it's an adventure..)
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