Buchenwald near Weimar April 24, 1945 Photo: Wikipedia |
Dehumanizing and debasing entire groups of people has led to
the extermination of millions and millions under totalitarian regimes of
fascism, communism, socialism, and Islamism. People have short memories and
seem to forget or gloss over the loss of innocent lives based on religion,
ethnicity, political views, and gender. If they don’t know them personally and
the numbers are so great, the horror becomes incomprehensible as if it never
happened.
Witnesses to atrocities across the centuries have died and historical
and political documents have been lost, destroyed, or stored away, slowly
decaying. More and more survivors of the Holocaust are dying each day with
their concentration camp numbers tattooed on their arms. Their stories disappear
with them as if they’ve never happened or existed. Footage is preserved for
posterity on fading newsreels and in documentaries. None is as heartbreaking as
“Night Will Fall,” a film by Andre Singer.
When allied forces started their move towards Berlin on
April 12, 1945, British soldiers trained as cameramen crossed the river Aller
into northern Germany and the events were recorded.
According to Maj. Leonard Berney of the Royal Artillery, two
German generals asked to speak to the British general. They were brought in
blind-folded; their message was that it was not a good idea to go through a
camp they were going to encounter because typhus had broken out and it would
infect the German Armies, the British Armies, and the civilian population if
the inmates would get loose.
Footage shows how armed German soldiers stepped aside and
allowed the British forces to march behind enemy lines. “The more I think about
it now, I am amazed that none of us opened fire!” said George Leonard (Oxfordshire
Yeomanry).
The soldiers’ footage became part of a project produced by
Sidney Bernstein for the Allied Forces, titled “German concentration camps
factual survey.” Later Alfred Hitchcock crossed the ocean to become part of the
team as his contribution to the war effort.
The first camp footage came from Bergen-Belsen. The soldiers
captured on film the beautiful countryside, bucolic farms with blooming
orchards, children, girls, and locals living their lives in seeming tranquility.
But the beauty of nature was soon overpowered by the stench of death and horror.
British soldiers lined up all the SS men and women and made
them prisoners of war, including the camp commandant, Josef Kramer. Mania Salinger
described how she yelled with joy, “The Germans are gone,” when she realized that
the watch tower was deserted. She was the first to be filmed behind the
barbed-wire fence by the liberating British troops.
Anita Lasker-Wallfisch heard on loudspeakers, “Help is on
the way,” and had difficulty describing the elated chaos that ensued. “You
spent years preparing to die and suddenly, you are still here.” Anita was 19
years old on liberation day. She and the concentration camp captives saw the
British soldiers as messengers of God.
But not everybody was so lucky. Thousands of dead prisoners
were stacked in heaps in various forms of decay. There were 30,000 of them, a field of naked
and emaciated corpses who had breathed, lived, and hoped until their last
breath to be rescued from this hellhole. The women looked like “marble statues”
in their rigor mortis. The inmates had
to live and die among these indescribable piles of horror. Some of the bodies were
wide-eyed staring into death like cutting swords of condemnation, how could you
let this happen?
Sgt. Mike Lewis, cameraman, said in 1981 that it was painful
to look at pits as large as tennis courts filled with dead bodies, babies,
young women, young men, the old, they did not know how deep they were, and the
stench of death was unbearable. Sgt. William Lawrie said in 1984 that “half-dead
people were walking about, there was hopelessness and despair.”
Soldiers lost grounding in reality; the bodies seemed like
mannequins and dolls as they were being thrown into pits, so skeletal in their
mass-induced starvation from malnutrition and overwork. They had to separate
what they were doing from reality in order to prevent madness.
The two weeks of filming visually conveyed the feeling of
despair and horror witnessed by the liberators of the camp. “These were
Europeans of another faith who had been killed for no other reason.”
On April 19, 1945, Richard Dimbleby said in a BBC radio
report, “I find it hard to describe adequately the horrible things that I have seen
and heard.” He found himself in “the
world of a nightmare.” The boney and emaciated bodies of women, pressing their
hollow faces onto windows, were too weak to come outside of their brown huts. But
they wanted to see daylight before they died every hour and every minute. Dead bodies were strewn on both sides of
railroad tracks. Some of them were actually still alive, moving limbs when
someone walked past.
David Dimbleby, a broadcaster himself, talked about the doubt
BBC had that his father accurately described what he had seen, but they checked
and checked again and everything he said was true. He was describing not just
this particular horror, David Dimbleby said, but the fact that it can happen
again if civilization breaks down to this degree when “people no longer behave
like human beings.”
A day after the report came out, Churchill said, “No words
can express the horror which is felt by his majesty’s government and the
principal Allies at the proofs of these frightful crimes now daily coming into
view.”
The ample footage documenting the horror of the Holocaust
was made possible by the American-British film department partnership which
decided to use the power of the moving image in war time. Initially the program
was set up to make small propaganda films for the war effort and “to deal with
a defeated Germany.” Sidney Bernstein was in charge of the British
Psychological Warfare Department.
Dr. Toby Haggith of the Imperial War Museums described how
the “camera was used in a very specific way, to gather evidence, to collect
evidence.” To show “how a person was brutalized or murdered, how they’ve been
killed, you have to get close to that person, to the wounds.” In prior wars, combat cameramen had not filmed
such gut-wrenching scenes.
Sidney Bernstein said in 1984 that his instructions to allied
cameramen were “to film everything that could prove one day that this actually
happened. It will be a lesson to all mankind as to the Germans, who had denied
that they knew anything about it.” The film would be the evidence that “we could
show them.”
Soldiers corralled officials and mayors within a reasonable
range, to come watch the disposal and burial of bodies in the pit and they
filmed them watching. Bernstein wanted film evidence that they had seen the
burials because most people would deny that it happened. SS officers were also
filmed helping with the burial of the skeletal cadavers.
Five hundred Hungarian troops captured on film with the SS
were manning the digging operation to bury as many bodies as quickly as
possible in order to reduce the evidence. “The Master Race had been taught to
be hard and they could kill in cold blood. It was proper to make them bury the
nameless, hopeless creatures they had helped starve to death.” By April 24,
1945, some sound equipment was brought in to better document Bernstein’s film.
Stewart McAllister, the best film editor in London, set out
to piece together the footage arriving from various cameramen. There was a
three month deadline to finish the film. Reports of similar atrocities discovered
by Russians in July 1944 in Majdanek, Poland, were initially ignored, but, in
light of the discovery at Bergen-Belsen, were being reconsidered. The crematoriums were still burning and the
bodies were still smoldering. Few living inmates had been found at Majdanek.
Prisoners had paid their own tickets to Majdanek. They
thought they were going to new homes and thus brought their most valuable
possessions with them. Piles and piles
of usable and repurposed clothes, dentures, toothbrushes, nailbrushes, and
shaving brushes, mounds of eye glasses, suitcases, dolls, scissors, and hair were
collected in bundles, sorted, weighed, and carefully stored.
Then Auschwitz was freed in winter by the Soviets. Eva Mozes
Kor spoke of the Russian liberators, barely visible through the heavy snow,
wrapping themselves in white camouflage, smiling from ear to ear, not looking
like the Germans, and bringing to those who could run to greet them, chocolate,
cookies, and hugs, her first “taste of freedom.” Vera Kriegel described how most were too weak
and feeble. They were so happy that these angels came from Heaven to liberate them,
she said.
Auschwitz was a “slave labor and mass extermination camp.”
More than a million men, women, and children died in the gas chambers.” Eva and
Vera were among the few surviving the infamous Josef Mengele and his cruel
experiments on twins. Fifteen hundred
other twins were not so lucky. German doctors injected twins with diseases and tried
to cure them. The children had no names, no papers, they were only the numbers
tattooed on their arms.
Buchenwald was a “prison and labor camp” three hundred
kilometers south-east of Bergen-Belsen. “Jedem
das Seine” (to each his own) was the entrance motto. Fifty thousand died there.
Shocker, the commandant, was reported to have said, “I wanted at least 600
Jewish deaths reported in the camp office every day.” Cruel thugs were
overseers and block leaders. “People were tattooed across the belly with slave
numbers and forced to work on starvation diet. People were coldly and systematically
tortured.”
Sgt. Benjamin Ferencz, U.S. Third Army, received reports of
people in their pajamas trying to walk on the side of the road; and they were
all looking like they were dying. Those who could not walk were dead or so they
seemed. Occasionally an arm would try to wave a passerby as a last attempt at
help. Dysentery, typhoid, and other diseases had decimated the camps. The dead
bodies “were piled up like cord wood in the front of the crematorium.” It was a
hellish nightmare that defies description.
The German people of Weimar were paraded through the camp to
be shown the piled corpses, the lit ovens, and the shrunken heads of two Polish
prisoners who had escaped and were recaptured. “They came cheerfully like
sightseers to a chamber of horrors.” Some German locals fainted, overwhelmed by
the stench of death. They were fine with the cheap labor from the camp as long
as “they were beyond smelling range of it.”
General Eisenhower, the Supreme Commander in Europe, came to
the camp to show reporters and the world what the American soldiers were
fighting against. A delegation of businessmen, Congressmen, Senators,
journalists, and a British parliamentary group disseminated their findings at
home.
More footage from a camp outside of Munich arrived. John
Krish, editor, spoke of Dachau as the most appalling and grotesque hell one can
possibly imagine which emerged from the black and white negatives they viewed
for four hours. Bodies were attempted to be burned before the Americans arrived
in order to hide the atrocities.
According to records, in the last three months, 10,615
people were disposed of in Dachau. Their clothing was turned over to the
Deutsche Textil und Bekleidungwerke GmbH whose shareholders were members of the
SS. Slave labor reclaimed and repaired the clothes. The garments were then
resold to the camp to be used for new prisoners. From a trainload left unloaded
on tracks in freezing weather so that the humans inside would die, seventeen
miraculously survived.
Bernstein wanted to have a director for his movie,
specifically his American friend, Alfred Hitchcock, who would tie it all
together. Hitchcock agreed to make this contribution to the war effort. The war
had ended but the soldiers were still sending back footage to London.
Hitchcock suggested using panning shots so that there would
be no accusations of “trickery,” of falsifying the evidence. Struck by how
close Germans lived to the horror camps, Hitchcock suggested to use maps in
order to give a better understanding of how close normal Germans were to the
atrocities committed almost under their noses. Population centers were so close
to these hellish camps, how could they not have known?
Ebensee is a gentle and peaceful place, with charming and
picturesque sites. But the German concentration camps had become part of the
economic system. The camp inmates could
see the same beauty and majestic mountains, but the inmates were starving
slowly to death.
According to the documentary, SS women were more merciless
and murderous than their male counterparts, torturing their innocent victims with
unbelievable cruelty. “Thousands were murdered just before liberation.”
After liberation, thousands of inmates refused to leave
because they had no place to go. Bergen-Belsen had 20,000 people, marooned
inside a slave labor camp, a true humanitarian crisis. Menachem Rosensaft was
born in the Bergen-Belsen holding camp. Most liberated Jews did not want to go
back to their countries; they wanted to go to Israel, U.S., or Canada. Most
countries refused to take the survivors because they had their own problems.
In the meantime, the Allies have lost interest in finishing
the documentary about the atrocities of the Holocaust because they felt that
Germany was already bombarded enough with its own guilt. America had grown
impatient with Bernstein and wanted to take the movie away from him. Billy
Wilder was named the new producer and he released a much shorter film version
called “Death Mills” which was shown to the German people, accusing them of
having committed these crimes.
Even though the British filed away and archived the entire Bernstein
film and the supporting evidence collected due to the politics at the time
surrounding the project, seventy years later, the documentary was finally
finished. “One day you will realize it would have been worthwhile.”
Auschwitz today
In the fall of 1945, the first on trial was Commandant Kramer
and his staff at Bergen-Belsen, shown on British Liberation footage; he was
sentenced to death. When the prosecutors realized they had a powerful source of
evidence, many Nazi criminals were found guilty of war crimes and sentenced
based on Bernstein’s documentary reels and testimony from the people they abused
and tortured. By November 1945 the International Military Tribunal began the
trial in Nuremberg which also used film footage as evidence against the
defendants.
Even though Bernstein’s 1945 film had been quietly dropped
from production, an Imperial War Museum team completed the film seventy years
later, using the original evidence, cameramen’s notes, cross cuts, and script, “to
complete Bernstein and Hitchcock’s intended final section.”
Scrolling through the horrible pictures frozen in time of some
of the enslaved, tortured, starved, killed, and burned by German fascists, the
movie ends with a powerful message. “Unless the world learns the lesson these
pictures teach, night will fall. But
by God’s grace, we who live will learn.” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TPukz3rttrk
Not sure how, but Americans have become so apathetic and comfortable listening to the same kind of rhetoric that Hitler used. Everyone should be forced to walk through such a horrific site and be reminded of the insanity our "leaders" are capable of inflicting on humanity. America needs people like you, Ileana, to remind us all. Thank you for the reminder.
ReplyDeleteIn 1964, when I was an high school sophomore, I wrote a report on the death camps for my world history class. It was the first report I'd done where I but my heart into it, spending hours in the library, researching. I cited the Zyclon B gas, who made the ovens, the train routes, the numbers, etc. I got a B- from Mr. Turlington. His only comment, "But why did it happen, Carol?"
ReplyDeleteIt's a question I never quite comprehended, until 2009, 2010, 2011, which I now believe mirror 1933, 1934, 1935. You fill in the rest. This must have been unspeakably difficult to write, Ileana, but profoundly important to all of us. We must never, ever forget, AND understand why it happened.
Carol,
ReplyDeleteYou are right. It is very painful.
Ileana
Not all of us Americans are dumb sheep following the siren song of free this, free that, and more and more government from our more and more left wing leaders.
ReplyDeleteThis is why we defend, so strongly, our rights to self defense with our own firearms. Not anymore for our nation which we have made strong, but for us personally.
Just as a policeman's gun is first and foremost to defend himself, so ordinary citizens need a way to provide and advertise a valid threat to protect and defend their individual freedom against tyrannical government and lawless criminals.
Let all governments truly worry that for every citizen that is disbarred from his inalienable rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of justice, that a few of those taking their liberties may also leave this earth prematurely.
In the words of our nations founding fathers, "To be defenseless is to already be a slave".
Of course, this is why gun control is the first step of tyrannical governments under whatever they choose as the ideology of their governance.
When these tyrannies have no facts to back up the false rhetoric, they turn to emotions and lies.
I am afraid, because I have learned that It is the nature of governments to become tyrannical and mistrustful of their citizens. Sometimes it just takes awhile before the kind of lying and criminally cruel people take over the government by peaceful means.
That's whats been going on here in the United States for the last fifty years of my life. The memory of WW2 is fading along with the heroic voices of the past.
It is all happening in the name of "progressive & liberal leadership" by politicians who have made a rewarding career out of government after learning how to lie to and mislead the public, plus amass huge wealth and influence to further their political longevity. This generally makes a mockery of the word democracy and of a democratically elected government.
Ross Elkins
Well said, Ross.
DeleteIleana