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Auschwitz: dreaming the nightmare of day – Dr Miklós Nyiszli (A-8450) – Extra

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 March 2022

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Abstract

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Extra
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Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Royal College of Psychiatrists

‘Sick at heart, and physically ill, I started my long journey homeward … I felt that I should rest, try to regain my strength. But, I kept asking myself, for what? On the one hand, illness racked my body; on the other, the bloody past froze my heart. My eyes had followed countless innocent souls to the gas chambers, witnessed the unbelievable spectacle of the funeral pyres. And I myself, carrying out the orders of a demented doctor, had dissected hundreds of bodies, so that a science based on false theories might benefit from the deaths of those millions of victims. I had cut the flesh of healthy young girls and prepared nourishment for the mad doctor's bacteriological cultures. I had immersed the bodies of dwarfs and cripples in calcium chloride, or had them boiled so that the carefully prepared skeletons might safely reach the Third Reich's museums to justify, for future generations, the destruction of an entire race. And even though all this was now past, I would still have to cope with it in my thoughts and dreams. I could never erase these memories from my mind.’Reference Auschwitz1

References

Auschwitz, Nyiszli M.. A Doctor's Eyewitness Account. Penguin, 1960.Google Scholar
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