Volume 8
September 13, 1993
Although the journey out of the ghetto did not last
very long, it gave me a chance to ponder over the almost four years of fenced-in
existence. It was very strange to be inside a railway carriage. I had not seen one for
over 5 years. After the ghetto it seemed odd to see the train rolling along, not even
knowing the direction that we were going. A desire to recall past days from pre-war years
to immediate days prior to departure, got hold of me. I started recounting many events of
my life. When I last took a journey it was the summer of 1939. We went then to the last
SKIF camp near Tomaszow. I was then a 15-year-old youth. Now at almost 20 years, I was
travelling again towards an unknown destination. So much suffering and pain and
dissolution of the compact family life took place, that all those events started crowding
in on me. It was an avalanche engulfing me. Thoughts on the future were somehow not
forthcoming. One couldn't even tell if anybody on that journey knew what lay in store for
us. I saw myself transported to the clearer pictures of bygone days. Maybe others did the
same.
There I was in the SKIF camp. Our leaders were
forever thinking up recreational and cultural and political activities. We were trying to
penetrate the intricacies of world politics. Fascism and its Nazi partners were marching
triumphantly. We sensed danger, but were not able to stop the dark forces in our own land
nor abroad, from growing into monstrosities. And then the war and the hope for solidarity
and succor from the western allies. The restrictions in our lives, when the country fell
apart. We were beginning to be tossed around like objects in a storm, unable to find
shelter nor meaning to life. Everybody around us got to discourse only about calamities.
Before knowing exactly how things were happening, we were already counting casualties.
There was not enough time to recount the despair of any one situation, when new ones were
already overshadowing the events that were just taking place. A constant rolling of time
with nothing but danger in its wake. No time to assess yesterday's events. Just a plain
scramble to arrive at the next event. The whole social fabric of an age-old order was
being unravelled. There was really no spare minute to contemplate our situation in a calm
manner. I was starry eyed about the war and the outcome. My thoughts were in keeping with
the trends of the older ones around me. Nobody foresaw or forecast any images of hell let
loose. It was totally bewildering to be faced without respite, with inhuman actions and
illogical deeds. It did not make sense, whatever the occupiers were putting us up against.
We and I personally could not reconcile the evil unleashed, with simple humanity, nor with
any desire to use the conquered people for the conquerors' benefit. It was a situation of
sheer madness. Nothing in my life prior to the war prepared me for the onslaught of the
gang of crazed Jew-haters and depraved criminal bigots. I had to adapt alongside all
others to unheard of situations .When I was a little boy, people around me were forever
talking of progress and equality. I grew up knowing only such people. Their children were
my friends. I used to be playful and mischievous. Soccer and plain running were my
favorite pastimes. I did fairly well in school. Everything seemed geared to a productive
life and enhancement of knowledge. I could then already feel at one with the motto of
productive work for a healthy living. In such a state of mind, full of dreams and
expectations, the war caught me almost unaware. I saw in those contemplative hours on the
freight train a life filled with high hopes and a hunted animal, trying to avoid dangerous
situations. My family went from being closely knit, to being fragmented and desperate.
When I left the ghetto, I felt as if I am waking up from a horrible nightmare.
In a state of stupor, with no thoughts on the
future, the transport arrived in the Polish industrial city of Czenstochowa. The city was
well known to me from Polish history books. It was this city that was associated with the
miraculous defense against Swedish invaders, several hundred years ago. It is still the
centre of Polish pilgrimages and catholic spirituality. With wonderment and trepidation as
to what lies in store for us in this new destination, we embarked on the far from finished
journey through the war-torn lands of Europe. In Lodz I left behind a life and a
despairing mother and sister.
September 14, 1993
Upon arrival in this new place, I experienced a bit
of a culture shock. Again, after the absence of over 4 years, the Polish language and the
Polish people became a visible and present reality. In the ghetto we were isolated from
all other people around us, except of course the German overlords, very few of whom ever
came face to face with us. Surely, under the impact of those traumatic ghetto years, we
the ghetto Jews, were almost feeling a sense of isolation from all people. Not having had
any living contact with anybody but our own people, we became conditioned to interact with
Jews only. Of course in our minds we knew of what is going on and what went on in the
past. But this ghetto life was very heavy with the survival psyche. The living world
outside was already a distant memory. Since the Jewish community consisted of many
distinct groupings, the ghetto life at first followed in that direction too. The constant
threat to life made the people less aware of the linguistic, cultural, religious and
political differences. As one ghetto community we slowly became one isolated, contactless
crowd of hunted Jews.
The living encounter with both Polish and Germans
in the new place, broke the spiritual syndrome of isolation. We also encountered guards
that were Ukrainians, Latvian and Lithuanian collaborators with the occupiers. When I
awoke from the almost unreal departure and the subsequent journey, I could not at first
reconcile myself to the forced labour camp "Warta" that I landed in. Of course
everything was real. My years in the ghetto and prior to the ghetto were the progression
from a normal family based life to one of constant uphill fight with the destructive
forces, unleashed by the Nazis. The thing that mostly hurt in all those years of the
sojourn in the hell of the ghetto, was the big question mark, that still haunts me today.
Why was I, alongside my whole family and the Jewish people, made to feel an outsider to
normal human pursuits? How could any human brain conceive of excluding other
co-inhabitants of this world from living a normal life? Where lies the embryo of such
ideas? It wasn't at all human nor rational. One could attribute such wild ravings to a
demented, unbalanced creature. But there were so many followers of this madness. Why did
so many follow such a leader? Was it for the simple fact of having lost the real human
spark or was it because it meant under the circumstances, to be at one with the winner?
We didn't know then what we know now. If ever we
did get an inkling of what went on around the Jewish people, we usually gave the benefit
of doubt to doubt. We probably couldn't fathom the real truth. We thought in terms of the
hellish life that we had to endure. Further thoughts on destiny were relegated to a
distant future. We knew and sensed the catastrophic reality. We didn't know its scope.
Upon contact with other Jews that were already in the camp and with their looks and
stories, we slowly but surely became privy to the horrible truth.
Our first encounter at the railway
siding was a mixture of disbelief and anxiety. Was this a concentration
camp, the existence of which we didn't hear of before? Or was it a labour
camp? Nobody amongst the guards let on as to where we really were. We
were counted and marched off to a public bath and delousing station. There,
we encountered the first people that were talking Polish in a matter of
fact way. It was pleasing to be amongst Poles, our neighbours for the
last thousand years. It was a departure from our previous usages. Even
the warm shower and delousing was a new experience. With little more than
the few meagre items of clothing that we wore, we marched again through
the streets of Czenstochowa to a factory somewhere in the city. Up till
this day I don't know more than the physical fact that a narrow river
ran through the factory grounds. That river was the Warta.
September 15, 1993
The novelty and the responses and the regime of the
labour camp Warta did at first seem strange. We were housed in an old warehouse, converted
into barracks. One huge hall with sleeping bunks two stories high. No relieving features
anywhere. No chairs, no tables, no privacy. All activity that went on, was in full view of
everybody. This was true of most of the inmates. The camp favourites had lots of
privileged spots, even in such drab surroundings. At first we could hardly fathom the new
reality of a labour camp. Who were the elite of the camp? They were Jews who spoke our
Yiddish language. But what function did they perform? What was their duty? What were the
German staff and the guards like? The main theme of any inquiry was the expectations of
the staff. What kind of work was being done in that huge factory adjoining the barracks?
Only after some replies from the veteran inmates, did the curiosity switch to those very
veterans.
Where did they come from? How long were they
already in that camp? We the people from the Lodz Ghetto were also a curiosity to the old
inmates. We looked emaciated. But we wore as yet clean clothes and shoes. They, the old
inmates, were wearing rags compared to our attire. They didn't look as famished as we did.
Of course, the elite was well dressed and certainly not starved. There was even an elder,
on the same standing as Rumkofsky. He was only a little fish compared to the elder of the
Lodz Ghetto. There were Jewish policemen and Jewish Kapos. Kapos were the so-called
foremen of the various working teams. There were Jewish barrack elders. The working
parties were directly under German bosses. These first inquiries did not tell us about the
real regime in the labour camp. We were trying to get acquainted with the new situation.
The ghetto with its terrible legacy of misery and death was still the most frequent topic
of talk amongst the Lodz Ghetto people. There was an overpowering desire on the part of
people to extol their and their family's standing in learning, commerce or position.
We all put our thoughts to resurrect the life that
was just left behind. I wasn't any less inclined than the others. The picture of my home
city and my youth and childhood stood out in sharp relief. I didn't lead, even as a
youngster, a life of only playfulness. Hand in hand with the natural youthful tendencies,
I also developed from earliest childhood a sense of communality and idealistic longing. I
can't remember any time in my life that wasn't somehow imbued with concern for the
movement, for the Jewish working people, for socialism. This preoccupation with ulterior
causes, plus my desire for advancement, guarded, as far as I am able to discern, my entire
life. The departure to a new place meant also to loosen the ties that bound me to my past.
I could not do it in any easy way. I felt, though instinctively, that a new type of life
was before me. I could not as yet see where it will lead. The first contact with the
labour camp reality was a disturbing event. So many things were not understood as far as
the new setup was concerned, that it left a cloud of both horrible expectations and inner
hope for easier ways to survive.
September 16, 1993
The reality of camp life was taking over at a fast
pace. Out of the heavy impression of the long ghetto atmosphere and its ways and byways, I
was confronted with the setup of the forced labour camp environment. The Jewish policemen
and Kapos were not at all shy to impose their rules on the inmates. They were rough
characters. They had behind them years of life in labour camps elsewhere. The food was not
too bad, compared to the ghetto rations. There was more of the essential proteins and
vegetables than we saw in the ghetto. We also quickly realized that there was a fair
amount of smuggled food circulating around. Through direct contacts with Poles and even
civilian Germans, the camp was much better fed than the ghetto was in general. Some of
that abundance was also coming our way. I think that most of the ghetto people were
without any money. We did not have any Polish or German money for years. All monetary
transactions were conducted in rumkies as the ghetto money was designated. That
money was issued by Rumkofsky on the instigation of the ghetto administration. It carried
no value outside the ghetto. Maybe some of the people that were in my transport had
valuables. Such items could be sold to some Poles. I didn't have any sort of possession
save what I wore on my back or old shoes.
The camp was set up by the Germans to provide a
labour force for an ammunition plant. That plant was still being built when we arrived. It
used to be a textile factory, before the war. The old machinery to produce materials was
being hauled out. New machines kept on arriving from Germany. The whole work force of the
camp was engaged in this operation. We were told by the German (camp commander) in charge
of the camp that we will be required to work 12 hours daily, 6 1�2 days a week. We will be
given food, shelter and some medical care. The rules of camp would be strictly enforced.
Deviations would be severely punished. There was a Workschutz detail that guarded
the compound. They were mainly Ukrainian and Lithuanian helpers to the Germans. They were
led by German noncommissioned officers.
There were hardly any parties going out to do
occasional assignments outside the camp. When such groups did go out, they would come back
loaded with bread and other foods. I never went on such assignments. I was detailed to be
working on the hauling and installing of the ammunition machinery. At that time, that is
approximately two weeks after arriving in the camp, we were given each a postcard. It was
a blank card with no address on the card, as to where we were. We were told to write in
Polish or German. We were ordered to inform our families of our safe arrival and of being
well in the new place. Of course we all did that. I also know that these cards arrived. We
did not get any cards or other responses. We were glad for that little chance to let our
beloved ones know that we are alive. It meant a lot to everybody.
September 17, 1993
As the work routine was established, we started
what would be known as a "camp normal life". We were woken up early in the day.
After being given some kind of a coffee-coloured brew with our daily ration of bread and
now and again some marmalade, we marched off to the nearby factory complex. The work was
hard. Very little mechanical help was available. Most of the hauling, carrying of machine
parts, of positioning was done with sheer muscle power. We were not overtly mistreated. We
were not beaten too often. Now and again someone was kicked or whipped. I don't recall too
many instances of being abused. There were also few occasions when anti-Semitic venom was
dished out. I would call the work place a matter of fact slave compound. There were even a
friendly few words exchanged sometimes between the German master and some inmates. Some
other masters were dyed in the wool anti-Semites. The bulk of the German staff was an
elderly lot and army exemptees. They were thinking very often about their families in
Germany.
Soon after our arrival, the camp got a contingent
of women. They were brought to the camp from various other labour camps. Their appearances
were more in line with our own looks. Quite a few women managed to keep a sexy look about
them. There also came to our camp some married couples. They were people from the same
city. They were at one point located in another factory. By the time summer rolled around,
the camp was a mixture of people, men and women from a number of localities. The work of
installing the machines and preparing the tools for production, was going ahead at full
speed. When a comparison with our ghetto existence used to be made, we did come to a
conclusion, that from many points of view it was an improvement. The food given to us and
the occasional bit of extra got through a kind master or Polish co-worker, helped build up
our strength. We missed our homes and families very much. But the quest to survive was the
driving motto.
I struck up friendships with a few fellow inmates.
I even knew a few people from the Lodz ghetto and from before. In the confines of the
almost devoid of privacy barracks, we did attempt to rekindle a spirit of Bundist
comradeship. I didn't feel totally alone or lost in this new environment. I even made
acquaintances among people from other towns and some from Lodz, whom I never met before.
As time went by and work was being done on sample
lots, I was assigned a machine minding position. I met new people there. Somehow the camp
kept expanding, with Jews being brought in from many places. This gave us a chance to
exchange news and reminiscences. We found out a great deal about the fate of those people
and their towns, and their families. We shared with them our own past. It was a great
event, this mixing of Jews from many parts of Poland. But we also became privy to a
terrible tale of woe and destruction. Many things that were unknown or little known
before, suddenly appeared right in front of our eyes.
September 18, 1993
We got slowly accustomed to be ruled by a
combination of German masters, Jewish kapos and the administration of the camp
life; by Jewish barrack elders, the Jewish elder of the camp and the Jewish camp police.
Each one of those rulers exercised a certain authority in their respective fields. The
overall authority was vested in the German camp commander. He was a ruthless tyrant.
Luckily for us, his fame to bestiality was earned in another camp near Cracow. To us he
was brutal, but not as bloodthirsty as he was in the other camp. There was only one
execution in the camp. We had to witness the dumping of the corpse of someone who was
supposed to have tried to escape. But beatings were very frequent. Almost all those who
wielded authority used to carry whips. They used them on many occasions. Jews whipping
Jews was not an infrequent occurrence. We, the people from the Lodz Ghetto, were told by
the others who were veterans of many camps that the present regime in the Warta was
benign, compared to what they witnessed before.
As time moved on, we heard from some German masters
and some Polish workers, that the invasion in Europe had already started. This invasion,
long sought after by all oppressed people in Nazi occupied Europe, released a lot of
emotional anticipation. Coupled with this electrifying news, came the big surge forward on
the Russian front. We started hearing of places that were already on Polish soil. Although
there was no access to radio communiqu�s, we read between the lines, in the German and
Polish press that somehow showed up in camp. Some of the German masters were essentially
peaceful people. They did not display too much hostility. They used to drop the occasional
hint as to what they thought of the war.
In the West, the allies were marching towards
Paris. Although the French cities that fell to the allies were not always familiar to our
knowledge, we nevertheless were able to figure out the progress of the allies. A feverish
period of expectation gripped all of us. Before long, we saw new inmates. They were
brought in from areas closer to the approaching front. Again, we encountered new people
with new tales of tragedies that befell them and their families. It was becoming clearer
by the day, that the fate of those deportees that were taken out from the ghetto for
several years by then, was a very tragic one. We were not ever immune to such stories. I
always felt my whole personality being shaken out of its roots. And yet, there was still a
tiny flicker of unexplained hope. The old adage of people not being able to comprehend
their own and their families' destruction, put up a barrier to total despair. Events were
chasing events. The general expectations which were very rampant all over the world, also
communicated to us. The staff of the camp started showing signs of nervousness. We heard
from Poles, our co-workers, of partisan activities in the woods nearby. Nobody that I knew
had any news from Lodz. We carried on our work in a state of euphoria and high hopes for a
speedy resolution of the war.
September 19, 1993
Not much was going on in the Warta works.
The factory was already in a semi-state of productive capacity. From the rumour that was
being spread around in the camp, we heard of faulty tools and dies. These highly accurate
parts of the production process were apparently being made somewhere in Germany. Because
of the scarcity of first class steel, they were being produced from ersatz metal.
It made the full production of the factory a constantly delayed event. These tools and
dies used to break down. The output of bullets was not of very good quality. I did not
hear much of sabotage, but it is possible that this came into play. The work force that
was already minding those machines were constantly being blamed for faulty products. I too
was subjected once to a whipping punishment for such an incident.
The constant pressure for the production of
acceptable bullets was the main motif of all the Germans' concerns. Amongst them were
masters with mediocre qualifications. For those of them engaged in this war production
meant to be released from the call-up for front line duties. They wanted the factory to
work well. So, while we were really innocent bystanders, they got very nervous and
concerned with every mishap. Mishaps there were plenty. The camp inmates kept their
distance from the irritated Germans. I don't know very much about the eventual capacity of
this factory. It couldn't have been great. There were too many hold-ups.
The internal atmosphere in camp was already full of
expectations for a speedy end to the war. The war material production based in Skarzysko,
a town not far from Czenstochowa, was being dismantled. Their geographic position was one
of near proximity to the front lines, which were right in the middle of Poland. The camp
received a large number of inmates from Skarzysko. We also received huge amounts of
provisions from those other work places. Besides sharing information with the new inmates
to our camp, we also had an unexpected windfall of meat, potatoes and other food stuffs.
The only time that I had huge pieces of meat was in those days.
It's true that this was horse meat. It might not
have even been very fresh. But I gorged myself on the huge chunks that I cut off the large
sides of dead horses that were shipped to the camp. There was so much of it that
volunteers were called out to help unload the meat. I certainly took the chance to eat as
much as I could absorb. I even found my way of steaming that meat. The factory had many
outlets for steam. I used to attach a cloth bag to the outlet and cover it with stones. As
far as I remember, it never attracted the attention of the camp guards. It was an exciting
period in our camp existence.
With so much going on around us, we came into the
late summer. The news of the Warsaw uprising in August came as another sign of hope for a
speedy end to the more than 5-year war. Warsaw was up in arms in feverish anticipation of
the Russian armies already visible on the other side of the Vistula river. It was evoking
memories of the heroic uprising in the Warsaw Ghetto. We waited with trepidation for news
of the developments on the many fronts of battle with the Nazi occupiers.
September 20, 1993
At about that time, i.e. in the fall of 1944, I had
an accident. A short time before that accident I got transferred from the machine minding
job to a small wood working shop. Since I had some experience with that sort of machinery,
I felt the new work to be an improvement in conditions of work and in the regime that
prevailed there. The German master in charge was an easygoing man. He never threatened
anybody. He used to bring bread and even sausage for his workers. The work was not too
hard. I felt a definite improvement in my situation. The aim of the shop was to provide
the wooden utensils and boxes needed in the factory. I worked there for a few months.
Unfortunately I inadvertently put my hand too far towards the knives of the planing
machine. I got caught by the impact of the blades. The outcome could have been fatal. I
escaped with a heavy wound on my left hand. That accident left me incapacitated for quite
a while. The regime in the camp was at that time already not too gruesome. Although not
spoken aloud, the news from the fronts all over Europe was very encouraging. The Germans
felt the weakening of their war machine. I was probably lucky. There weren't any
selections being made to eliminate the weaker or injured inmates. I walked around with an
injured hand and suffered lots of pain.
At that time we heard rumours that the Lodz Ghetto
had been liquidated. We didn't know any details. The news came from some German sources.
The uprising in Warsaw came to naught. The Russians were camping on the opposite bank of
the Vistula. But the allies and the partisans all over Europe were very active. Big parts
of Europe were already liberated. Paris was free. It had the looks of the inevitable.
More inmates were brought in from areas close to
the Russian front. In that atmosphere that enveloped the whole camp, we could hope for
leniency from the already bewildered occupiers. Even the Jewish camp elite got the fever
of the changes that were hanging in the air. Some of those in charge were quite bestial.
They were very busy serving their overlords with zeal. I didn't get hit nor molested by
any guards or policemen. I was nevertheless privy to a regime of terror and intimidation.
In the time that I spent in the Warta I also
managed to participate in a few Bundist gatherings. By asking around, we found some
Bundists from Cracow, Piortrkow and some from Lodz. We used to gather behind the barracks
and share news, some bread and even celebrate the Bund's anniversary. I knew from before
the war one Bundist. He was sent out of the ghetto at the same time as I. He did know more
comrades than I. He was very active in the clandestine work of the Bund committee. He is
alive. He lives in Toronto.
As the new year rolled around, the air was already
charged with the currents of the march of events. On the 15th January 1945, without any
prior official notice, we were woken up early and given some bread and coffee and told to
pack belongings. I was in the first party to go. It was either the fact that I was a
half-invalid or just by chance that I was amongst the first to arrive at the railway
station. From all over Czenstochowa parties kept on arriving. There were 4 or 5 camps
scattered in the city. We were loaded up on freight trains and sent away. The capacity was
such that there was no room for all inmates. Those that were left on the platform were
marched back to camp.
When our transport arrived in two days' time in
Buchenwald, Germany, together with the German S.S. guards, were also some prisoners from
this notorious camp to receive us. They told us that Czenstochowa is already liberated. It
happened on the morrow of our departure. With a terrible heart ache for having missed so
narrowly the Russians, we were counted and assigned to outlying barracks. Although on the
verge of freedom, we were once again slaves in the German hell.
My friend from Lodz, that I knew from before the
war, Lalek Lenkinski, was amongst the lucky ones. He was liberated on January 16, 1945.