This is a fan-fiction of sorts from Elie Wiesel's visit to Aushwitz about a nazi soldier |
Birkenau “The Children. Oh sweet Lord, please be with the children.” These were my thoughts as I saw truckload after truckload of Jewish families being dumped into the pits like undesired garbage throughout the day. I felt sick. No not sick; I felt disgusted, nauseous, disturbed. My head was spinning with the foul images of helpless children being incinerated to a lifeless form of ash and bone. My gut twisted like a raging hurricane at its pinnacle. I only wish my body had perished within a tempest years ago. I have not the slightest desire to withstand the visual molestation I endure here at Auschwitz. If tolerating the torment that occurs here has courage then, I have no courage. If this disturbs me so horribly, then why don’t I hurl my body between an innocent Jew and the incinerator? I can not figure this question out as I serve here at Auschwitz for the great country of Germany. “Great?” A more appropriate adjective would be bloodthirsty or heartless. I take so much pity on these people. Most of the innocents lived blameless lives and some, even when they were being put into a noose, praised God and prayed for the dead. The Nazis think they are better than these people,but I say not. I could possibly categorize every SS in Poland as a habitual adulterer, slanderer, gossiper, blasphemer, or gambler. I work for this country that is bent on death, but I consider myself a good man. Or I used to rather. This was before I served Germany. Now I consider myself a murderous Nazi Gestapo. I still did nothing even when Jesus and I knew I needed to. I was raised in a Christian home in Munich in Southern Bavaria. Every Sabbath we attended the Evangelical Lutheran Immanuel Church of Munich and then served every time the doors were open. After I graduated from high school I decided to join the Army. It was about the turn of the Nazi party, the young energetic Adolf Hitler and his party had given Germany the hope it needed after a long economic crisis and tragic world war. Hitler was slowly taking control, but God only knew the corruption and bloodshed that would ensue from this most unwise election, but I cannot blame any German. In retrospect any wise man would’ve elected Hitler: he was a staunch Catholic, had no criminal record, and was a visionary and charismatic leader. Hitler, I dare say, was a genius of sorts, in that fashion. Several months after basic training, I was stationed at the newly constructed Auschwitz, as a guard. Few people could figure out why the new leaders had started building facilities like these, including my family and myself. I soon found out. Not long after getting settled into Auschwitz they passed the Nuremburg laws. This was closely entailed by the forcing of the “yellow star” then they started to deport the Jewish people. It started up mildly but over about a year of two it went from imprisonment to cremation. The situation had heated up. Now it seems I am qualified to watch children being flung into what seem to me to be the gates of hell. All while ensuring stability and peace so that as many people as possible can make it to the blasted ovens. Even outside, in the crisp Polish air, the stench of roasting human flesh cannot escape our scents. Everything was under full swing. The ovens were ignited, the death chambers fueled, and the gallows were built to standard. I used to be so excited to serve my country, now I find I just wish my life to be over if I have to watch one more ruthless murder. These events cause me to think that maybe God is sending a message to the Jews of our world. Surely, the God of Abraham could not allow such an evil. I started to feel as if I were cursed like the faithful Job. Normally I did not notice the people as they passed through Birkenau. One day, however, one family seemed to catch my attention. I recognized them from a small town in Transylvania. Not long before I joined the German Army I traveled to Transylvania with my father, who was doing business in Ukraine and oddly enough we would always stop in Sighet. Odd because Sighet is very small and remote, and the chances I would see someone from there I recognized were slim. My father loved that small town. “I would love to retire there,” He would always say, “It is very quaint and peaceful.” On my excursion through Sighet I remember seeing two characters. One of which was the boy I saw here at Birkenau. The other was an apparent cabalist trying to tell stories of the cruelty of the Hungarian army. No one believed him or even listened to him including myself. I did no want to believe allies of the country I will soon be serving could be this way. I deciphered (still in Sighet that) the boy was a Jew considering The Cabalist was supposedly the boys mentor and the majority of the Sighet population was Jewish. It seemed odd though that I would run into the boy here though it made perfect sense. I didn’t do anything as they passed in the line but watch. He was clinging to his father tightly. I saw him looking about, though not to blame. A boy his age (or a human of any age for that matter) should not witness this. His looks jolted back and forth between soldiers and the fence. I could see in his eye he thought, as well as I, that he was heading toward the pit where the infants burned. He looked as though he wanted to run for the fence. I knew he would be shot before he ever made it and even if he didn’t I think I might have saved him the pain of electrocution or fire with my own weapon. He moved closer becoming ever more sporadic. I could almost see the fear and the reflection of Hell’s flame in his eye as he stood before the pit. I could see in him the desire to run; to get shot in the head rather than to be burned to death. I lunged forward in an act of willpower. It was merely reaction, in my own mind I wanted to help the boy. I started to take action by stepping between him and the fence with my hand on the trigger. Would I shoot the boy? Would I let him go and let him get electrocuted? Incinerated? Beaten to death? I felt helpless. There were such difficult decisions to make with such a short time to make the right ones in. My steps took me between the pit and this small Jewish boy. I redirected him to the work line. I think I might have felt more relieved than the boy. Apparently the Jews were not the only people to notice. The commanding officer warned me of such a thing. Resistance is a deadly crime in Nazi courts. He re-assigned me. I was to work at the crematorium now. Pale and withering, the Jewish families, not picked to work for Germany ,started lining up. I was to become Death. My new duties were to operate one of the machines responsible for burning a multitude of Jewish peoeple to death . I started by watching, thankfully, without victims. I learned how to operate the infernal device. Now it seemed I was the Gatekeeper. I watched as people entered it before, now I was to force them in. This day my humanity ended. This was to be my first subject. I stared into the weeping face of a 10 to 12-year-old girl who was apparently separated from her parents and looked as if she died yesterday from starvation and distraught. I didn’t want to do it no more than I did wanted to watch outside at Birkenau, but I risked the gallows or a bullet if I did not. I picked her up and laid her on the slide that was still warm and reluctantly wheeled her inside. Will I do something? Is this really happening? Slowly she went in until I could not see her face any longer: I did not want to see it. I tried to activate the contraption, but my hands had become like lead against my sides, and I could not. I waited for a millennia hoping in my hesitation, the little girl could magically escape. It was hopeless: my supervising officer who was already frustrated by my insolence, did the deed for me. He stormed over and pulled the lever. Even though I only saw her face for a split second, the scream that pierced the air that day was more then suitable to induce an image of that girl burning to death by my hands. I regurgitated as to get rid of the feeling inside me. I wish I could’ve forgotten that day that drained the life from my soul forever. Sadly, I couldn’t. I couldn’t save that boy and his father from death that was still most likely to find them in this camp. I couldn’t save that little girl today and this night I cannot save myself. My soul is condemned forever. I will always be remembered as a Nazi. This night on the 13th of January, 1944 I will attempt one last thing to exterminate the images from my mind. It will probably only end up taking my life, but hopefully there I will have peace between what I’ve witnessed here and my soul and Jesus Christ. My name is Niklas Weber and I am a guard at Auschwitz extermination camp. My story is just one of the possibly hundreds of thousands of people’s that will die here. Niklas pulls from a holster the loaded Lugar handgun. Take a good look at what has happened. I am writing this so the world and everyone in it will never forget what happens to humanity when the so-called righteous are dormant when the wicked stir. After contemplating his thoughts and re-reading the text, Niklas asks himself if this is something that should be done. Then he thinks of the boy and his family, and also of the young girl from the crematory. Shuddering, puking, and crying he puts the barrel in his mouth. |