- Introduction
- Rabbi Baruch G.
- Rachel G.
- Christa M.
- Col. Edmund M.
- Edith P.
- Marion P.
- Helen R.
- Peter S.
- Anna W.
|
|
Testimony Excerpts :: Christa M.
A German witness describes prisoners from Dachau
Download video: 4.9 Mb, 83 seconds,
Quicktime format
Download audio: 650 Kb, 83 seconds,
.au format
Excerpts copyright © 1996, Yale University Library.
Christa M. was born in Saarbrucken, Germany in 1930. Her father had
served in World War I and was an ardent German patriot. Although he was
not fond of Hitler, he made a great deal of money as an industrialist,
profiting from the war industry and slave laborers. He would have liked
to have served in the military, but because he was too old, he became
a strategy advisor. He was a strict disciplinarian and Christa M. was
often punished for asking the "wrong questions." He protected his family
from the war by having them move to remote areas. While living outside
of Munich, in April 1945, Christa was sent by her mother to obtain some
cheese. On a country road, crowded with fleeing soldiers and civilians,
Christa M. encountered prisoners from nearby Dachau.
"Still now, it's just so hard for
me because there are no words, there really are no words for it, there
are no words, I can't find words. Well, there were people leaning against
that wall, sort of hunched, quite a few, and there were some few standing
in the middle of the street in little clumps. And they all had the blue
and white striped uniforms, or maybe it was black and white, but they
were striped uniforms, and we had seen uniforms like that in the paper
and so on. But, I thought--I knew they were prisoners, but I didn't know
what prisoners. But then, my God, they were skeletons, I mean skeletons.
I'll never forget the eyes. The eyes were three times the size because
there were no more faces. I was just... and skeleton hands. And I see
all these people and the ones that were against the wall, they couldn't
even walk. They could not walk."
...So I immediately went toward them... It was just a reaction... these
people must get food and all I had was the cheese. So I started opening
my rucksack and the minute I reached in and got the first piece, these
people came literally crawling, if you can imagine crawling, as much as
they could, on hands and knees, towards you. Just looked at you. To this
day I see those eyes. I see those faces.
...So I gave the cheese out. ...An SS guy...he's got the big German
shepherd and he screamed at me. ...If you give those bastards one more
piece of whatever you got there, he said, I'm going to make you join them.
...And I started running."
Christa M. climbed a nearby hill and looked back. She could "see columns
marching, five by five, SS on both sides, front and back...pushing and
shoving." If anyone fell out, they were shot or dogs were set upon them.
Meeting a classmate on her way home, she explained, crying, what she had
just seen. Calling her a stupid ass, the classmate told her they were
emptying Dachau. When she returned home without the cheese, she was punished.
She cried for a long time and resolved to leave at the first opportunity.
"I wasn't ever going to talk about it. But you can't let it go by. ...I
hope it will never happen again. But it could have been stopped too. Nobody
did."
Christa M. Holocaust Testimony (HVT-880). Fortunoff Video Archive
for Holocaust Testimonies, Yale University Library.
The length of the complete testimony is 1 hour, 18 minutes. A catalog
record is available for this testimony in Orbis, the Yale University
Library online public access catalog. Please see the Catalog
and research guide section of this site for more information.
|