AN INCIDENT AT AMPFING By MICHAEL B. SHIMKIN |
1 On May 3, 1945, the Third Corps For- ward Headquarters found itself in Dorfen, a sleepy little town fifty kilometers almost due east of Munich. For the Third Corps the war was over. The Corps on the flanks had pinched off its zone of operations, which on the trans- parent overlay of the situation map came to a sharp end point around the Austrian border. The staff was not entirely pleased. "It's a darn shame," murmured a Corps Artillery major as he shook his head at the map. "And just when the war was almost getting to be fun." Public Health Team Number Two, Third Army, had been attached to the Third Corps for ten days. Public Health Teams are not to be found in the Army Table of Organization, especially when they consist of two officers of the United States Public Health Service, an UNRRA nurse in a British uniform, and one private, AUS, driving a spring- less reconnaissance-and-command car to which is attached a trailer filled with a half-ton of DDT powder. It was a unit dreamed up by the Third Army and accepted by the Corps because it promised to fulfill a need. In the past ten days our team had surveyed six towns, reorganized public health departments and hospitals, had been in a dozen camps for displaced per- sons, deloused several thousand people, and, of course, had written many official- sounding reports. During the same period we had come down from Frank- furt, had driven two or more hours each day over roads of every description, and had set up our meager equipment and personal belongings in three towns in order to keep up with the Corps. Omar C. Hopkins, Senior Sanitary Engineer of the Public Health Service and Lieutenant Colonel to the Army, was gray-templed, soft-spoken; an ex- pert on sanitation from Oklahoma. I was the medical officer, and the guild rules of medicine placed me in charge of the team despite my lower rank. | 2 "Hop," as he was known to everyone, and I were now veterans of many a waterless, foodless camp for displaced persons. We had been sent overseas post-haste when it looked as if the Ger- mans would collapse in September of 1944 and then had sat gnawing our fingernails in the UNNRA office in Lon- don for six weeks. A deal was finally made between the Public Health Service and the Army, and we were transferred to General Elsenhower's G5, the branch that had been established for military government and civil affairs. We flew to Versailles and from there were passed down on paper and bodily to the Twelfth Army Group, through the European Civil Affairs Division, and thence to the Third Army. We started to operate the day after we reported to its Public Health Branch. In the beginning we were almost com- pletely on our own, thumbing rides on courier jeeps and trucks and carrying our few supplies. Three medical officers and two sanitary engineers were supposed to cover the civilian public health activities in the ever-shifting Third Army area. We were attached, de- tached, transferred, and just sent to more units than we will ever remember. Most of the time all we could do was inspect, evaluate, and report and tackle only the most pressing emergencies. The hospitals and other medical facilities of the Army had their hands too full with their own problems to have much time for civilians, either allied or enemy. The understaffed, undersupplied G5 eventually turned over its medical headaches to the Surgeon. Now the medical department could support us and ex- tend some of its seemingly limitless sup- plies of equipment and personnel to our problems. No one knew definitely "under" whom our team operated-G5 or the Surgeon-so we reported as the spirit moved us and where we thought we could get the most effective action, This loose arrangement had several merits: it allowed most lenient move- ment and definition of our own problems without too much regard for official channels; and we wrote our own Stand- |
3 ard Operational Procedures as we went along. Every morning and evening we visited both G5 and the Surgeon, with the query, "Any problems today ?" There always were. The evening of May 3 we returned to Headquarters after an inspection of the large allied prisoners-of-war-camp at Moosberg. Mike, our nearsighted driver, navigated our battle-reconditioned ve- hicle safely into the parking area once more. Outside Headquarters the side- walk was crowded with liberated French prisoners waiting for the trucks that would take them to the next center on their journey home. We walked along the dusty cobblestone street past the row of Corps houses and neat little gardens surrounded by grilled iron fences. The invariable first item of business upon return to HQ was to ask for mail. Hop and I made for the house set aside for the Surgeon and his staff, and, since the mailroom never could decide whether we were with G5 or the Surgeon, Doris Gray, the UNRRA nurse, went to cover G5. She was in high favor with the German-accented sergeant who was the factotum of that office. There had been considerable speculation about Doris when she arrived in the Army zone a few weeks before. Rumor had it that the red globe on her British cap was some sort of Soviet insigne and that the letters UNRRA on the red patch on her left shoulder were a capricious Russian way of writing USSR. Regard- less of nationality and affiliation, however, she was a welcome addition to the Corps, especially since the Red Cross girls were usually relegated to Rear Headquarters. Aside from her professional aspects, she was most helpful when we had to deal with full colonels, supply sergeants, and other absolute authorities who were susceptible to the charms of a feminine smile. Lieutenant Colonel Edward J. Vanderear, chief of the preventive medical section, was our liaison with the Sur- geon's office. When we came in, Van was carefully polishing a six-inch Luger, his | 4 prize souvenir and the envy of the Headquarters staff. He heard our brief report on Moosberg, put away his Luger, and led us to a map. "Tomorrow you better get over to Ampfing," he said. "Reports from Fourteenth Armored say there is a camp there that is worse than Buchenwald". I dismissed that as an exaggeration. I had been at Buchenwald concentration camp three weeks before, and its incinerators, torture chambers, tanned human skin for lampshades, emaciated corpses piled like cordwood, and the starved, diseased, still living specimens of human degradation were fresh in my memory. We located Ampfing just west of Miihl- dorf and traced the thin curve of road leading east from Denting. Then we all walked over to the mess with Van. The rness was on the first floor of the hotel in which we were quartered along with French liaison officers, visiting firemen below the dignity of being entertained by the General, and other personnel that attached itself loosely to the Corps. The hotel had been cleared of its German residents, but they were always coming back to get potatoes and other food they had secreted under the beds and bureaus. The next morning, the four of us started out early in a car loaded with DDT, a few K-rations, a map and ten hand-operated powder guns. Our military appearance was appreciably reduced by a total lack of weapons and the presence of a nurse who doggedly continued to wear skirts and who did not possess a helmet. I carried a silly leather ridinp crop inherits from a Nazi bipwip. Its snap had a salutary effect on the reactions of Germans and improved their comprehension of my hundred-word German vocabulary. Hop carried nothing but a notebook. Mike was the only one who had a frayed, dirty red cross on his left sleeve to denote our noncombatant status. It was a beautiful spring morning; the ground mist was lifting, and the snow-capped Alps were dimly visible on our right. By nine o'clock we were in |
5 Ampfing. The war had passed over Ampfing without leaving its usual ugly imprints. Even the warehouses beside the small railroad station appeared in- tact. Such structures nearly always had raping holes from artillery fire or showed evidence of looting. We were constantly on the lockout for large build- ings that could serve as centers for dis- placed persons, but there were none in Ampfing. We knew that there was no military government officer in the town, but it was always possible that some tactical unit had set up an office to net in this capacity. Our battalion and company commanders thought it was interesting work, and it made impressive reading back home when you could tell the folks you were now mayor of a town. The offices would abruptly terminate their functions, however, when hungry displaced persons, interrupted public utili- ties, and sick and demoralized Germans revealed other, less pleasant, aspects of civil administration during war. We pulled up to the first intelligent- looking civilian, "Come here!" I prowled. He came up to the car; if he was apprehensive he certainly did not show it. I asked him where the Militärregierung was and what about the Bürgermeister. The German did not know about military government, but the baker was the mayor. He waved his arms to indicate the directions. I asked him where the camps were, labor camps, concentration camps. "In the woods,?" said the German, "by the factories, all around." Attempts to elicit more specific information with my vocabulary were fruitless. "O.K., Mike," I said, "let's find the bakery." Following directions, we soon came to it. Outside stood a man in a dirty pray, black-striped suit, the familiar uniform of the concentration camps. Another man in similar dress emerged from the bakery, his arms loaded with large loaves of bread which he dumped into the horse-drawn wagon that was standing by the door. | 6 "Hey Comrade!" I shouted, using the term that concentration camp inmates universally applied to one another. Both men turned sharply and with one motion jerked their caps off their shaved heads. They stood at attention, stupid smiles on their blank faces. I beckoned them forward and with gestures told them to replace their caps, emphasizing that they need not do that any more, ever. The smaller of the two was summoning up his courage. His lips moved, and on the third at- tempt he said, "I speak English, sir. May I assist?" The accent was French. "Show us where the camp is," I said, He crouched on the fender. "Come in; sit down here" I said, pulling him up by his arms. He looked at me with unbelieving eyes and sat down on the edge of the leather seat. "You tell the driver how to get there." The man jumped off the seat and crouched behind Mike. It was not until much later that I persuaded him to sit with me again. We started to question him. How many people were there at the camp? About six hundred, but most of them had fled. What were the conditions! Bad, very bad. Any Americana at the camp? No, but an American officer had been there and said there would be help. He drew out a dirty slip of paper. "This authorizes the bearer to draw all necessary supplies for his camp," it read. The signature and serial number were illegible, a normal precaution when handing out such vouchers. Bread-he was getting bread for the camp. Was there any water or electricity at the camp, Hop wanted to know. No, nothing; electricity failed three days ago. Many people dying! Oh, yes, just about the usual number. I asked our guide his name. "Andre Israel, French," he said and pulled up his sleeve to reveal a tattooed number on his left forearm. This was a camp for Jews, almost all Hungarians. He himself had been there six months and had been appointed a clerk because he spoke German. Was it an extermination camp, gas and incinerator chambers in it? Andre shook his head without changing |
7 expression. This camp was established only eight months ago. It was chiefly a stopping point for people who were on their way to Auschwitz (now again called by its Polish name, Oswiecim) where the gas chambers were-for two, or three, or perhaps four million men and women and children. Thousands had passed through here. Andre shrugged his shoulders, and his voice, dulled of all feeling, sounded as if he were talking about sides of beef. Then, two, three months ago, he went on, trans- portation broke down. They had buried over two thousand since then. Any other camps around here? Yes, about ten, but most of them were labor camps of the Organization Todt. There were two factories, one making explosives, the other cement. We entered a wood. As in all German forests, the trees were carefully spaced, and the ground was clear of underbrush. A small metal sign on a post read "KL" - Konzentration Lager. We drove on. around a sudden bend in the road, a fifteen-foot, triple barbed-wire enclosure loomed into view. At the top of each corner was a guardhouse equipped with searchlights. A few wooden barracks and several green silo-like structures were scattered under the trees. "Did anyone escape by climbing the trees?" I asked because some of the branches extended over the fence. "Escape ?" Andre asked in bewilderment. "To where?" The area was deserted and silent, and the cry of a bird echoed sharply. With- out the barbed wire it would have seemed an idyllic spot for a vacation. Across the road were neat wooden houses, sur- rounded by a barbed-wire fence. "The guards lived here," said Andre. I felt a rush of anger, remembering Buchen- wald. "Did the comrades get many of them?" Andre shrugged his shoulders again, a motion combining ignorance with the feeling that it was of no importance. "They got out fast. Had time to kill only a few comrades, maybe twenty, before they left. Perhaps some are still in the forest." | 8 We stopped, and Andre jumped out of the car, ran to the gate, and shouted some names. Two men came running out of the nearest wooden barrack and drew open the gate. They stood stiffly, caps in hand, as we drove in. "Who is in charge here?" I asked as we entered the largest barrack. We went into a dispensary, containing a wooden examination table, a few rusty instruments, a row of ointment jars on a shelf, and a large poster on the wall announcing the louse as an enemy that must be eradicated. "Who is in charge ?" I repeated. Andre translated. "This is one of the doctors," said Andre. A tall, stooped man with an indescribably sad face, his metal-rimmed spectacles hanging loosely on his large nose, stepped forward from the door. "Doctor," I said, "how many sick people do you have here? Can yon give me a list ? And how many of them need immediate hospitalization ?'' "All are sick," replied the doctor through Andre. "Hundred, two hun- dred. All should be hospitalized." We asked about food. The cook had a few supplies left, mostly potatoes, and more were on the way. Enough for two or three meals; that is, for a cup of soup for every man. "Do you have any women or children in the campT" I asked. Yes, there was one. We were led to the adjoining room. A young woman was arranging a tattered blanket around an infant lying in a wooden crate. "A month old tomor- row," said the doctor. "The first one here who has ever survived that long." The mother and child appeared to be well, and the baby was being breast-fed. "Surgical eases in here," said the doc- tor, opening the door to the large room occupying the remainder of the barrack. Here on double-deck wooden beds- mere wooden slabs covered with filthy straw-were gaunt shadows of men with shaved heads, showing their ulcerated legs, the unhealed whiplashes across their backs. They all had pale faces and puffy ankles, the protein-deficient flesh |
9 that was unable to recuperate from even minor wounds. Numbers were tattooed on their forearms or across their chests. What infectious diseases do you have here? we asked. Typhus. Are you sure it is spotted typhus and not intes- tinal typhus ? No way to be sure; prob- ably both. No one with high fever in this ward. We asked to be shown around, the worst places first, and went out of the barrack. On the ground by the door was a thickset man on his knees, hands folded in prayer, eyes shut. The doctor made rotary motions at his temple. "Crazy," he said. "A Pole, the only one we have here." Mike was breaking open a K-ration box and passing out its contents to two other inmates who had appeared. Reinforced by four men who clam- bered onto the running board, we got into the car again. Andre was now more self-possessed and directed Mike through the muddy court. We bumped along be- tween tree stumps and mudholes. "Here," said the doctor. In front of us was a raised knoll with a stovepipe sticking out of the ground. "Bunker," said the doctor. We made our way on foot through an inch of mud to a hole in the ground. Crude wooden steps led down some eight feet. They were slippery, and our noses were assailed by a fetid smell combining decay, excrement, and sweat. "Acht- ung!" cried a voice. There was a moment of silence, and then a hoarse roar arose, an inhuman, unearthly sound. "America - hooray - hooray -" A dead, muffled, hopeless sound. "Acht- ung!" cried a voice again, louder. "No, no," I snapped. "No more! At ease!" On both sides of a rectangular space were triple shelves, bare wooden planks. In the center, three wooden poles supported the ceiling. At the far end a nude skeleton sat on a barrel with a plank across it. He was supported by another skeleton who was standing; rather, they leaned against each other in order not to fall down. Bloody excre- ment was spattered around the barrel. | 10 We walked along the planks on the muddy floor. The shelves were filled with what had been men. Their bodies were naked or only partly covered by a scrap of tattered, dirty, gray blanket. Their bodies were no more than skin stretched over bone; their knees were the thickest portion of their legs. Their shaved heads hung limply, eyes staring out of hollow sockets, noses abnormally prominent against the fleshless faces. Mouths were open, dry, red. Expres- sionless, animal-like creatures, they all looked alike; all individuality had long ago been washed out. Some had enough strength to turn their heads and fol- lowed us with burning eyes; a few turned over and extended their hands in our direction; some just lay, staring with unseeing eyes and barely breathing. A soft, deep groan, a murmur of death issued from one of the bodies. ''Wasser, Wasser bitte," the boy whispered. I felt his head; it was burning hot. A man who was standing stiffly at attention at the table in the center, a crude metal pitcher in his hand, did not move. He was the only one with clothes on. What was there to say? "We shall help," I croaked. "We shall help as soon as we can." The tension broke. There was the inhuman whine once more, "Hilfe, hilfe -" I turned around and made my way to the stairs. I found a look of ill-disguised nausea, disbelief, and anger on the faces of Doris and Hop, the same expression that must have been on mine. Mike stood on the steps, rigid and with a quivering lip; he looked at me with com- pressed mouth and swore. We entered four more bunkers and two corrugated iron shacks. The shelf beds were arranged a bit differently, and one iron shack had one thin blanket per man. Some of the men were not quite so emaciated; others had great sores on their legs and backs. A few that stirred around, stumbling between the central table and the bunks, had ankles swollen with edema. It was more and more of the same. "We shall help, we shall help as soon as possible." If there was hope |
11 but none complained. "How many of these men ?" I asked the doctor, waving my arm to encompass the area. He passed his hand over his forehead and adjusted his classes. "It is hard to think," he muttered. He turned to a comrade. "Get every bunker to count the patients at once!" He spoke in loud, harsh tones. He did not mean to be cruel, but it was the only way to get a response from these beaten, dulled people. Hop pointed to one of the half-dozen silo-like structures, each perhaps twenty feet in diameter, covered with a thatched roof. "What are those ?" We were led to one by Andre. A small door, no windows, straw covering the floor. "The healthy ones slept in here," said our guide, "Fifty in each. Didn't stay healthy long. Some of us escaped the guards when they left by hiding in the straw." "All empty now?" I asked. "Yes, all that could walk have left." We held a hurried conference. The doctor came up with the information that there were about 150 men in the bunkers. I asked how many doctors there were among the inmates. "Eleven," he said in a flat voice. "At one time there were over seventy. Many of the eleven are sick themselves. I am sick-" His voice faltered. Andre continued, "Many lawyers, actors, doctors in here. Almost all Jewish, Hungarian. No other Jews left." Immediate hospitalization was essential for all. We thought that at best no more than half the people could possibly survive. In large concentration camps such as Buchenwald, where twenty thousand inmates were discov- ered, whole evacuation hospitals had been sent in to take over the rescue work. The numbers here were too low for such action, and the delays would be too long. We decided that we could handle the phase ourselves. Hop and Doris would stay at the camp, delouse the population, and get them ready to be moved. I would go back and arrange for hospitalization and ambulances. | 12 Mike unpacked a box of DDT cans and our ten hand guns. These con- sisted of a tin can attached to a hand- operated pump. The DDT powder was placed in the can, and a group of likely- looking individuals of a camp to be de- loused were instructed in the gun's use. Clothing was loosened, and two squirts of the gun were directed down the front of the neck, the back of the neck, up each sleeve, and down the trouser or shirt belt, fore and aft; cap or hair was also powdered. This method effectively controlled insect life, did not entail un- dressing, and could be done rapidly. It was the main means of combating typhus in Europe. For the naked inmates of this camp, it would be necessary to dust thoroughly both their bodies and their ragged blankets. Hop asked the doctor if he was sure that 150 people were all he had. The doctor bobbed his head up and down as Hop supped a couple of K-rations into his coat pocket. Another English-speaking man was found so that Andre could accompany me back to Ampfing. The car bad sunk down in the mud, and we had some trouble getting under way. Andre sat in front with Mike, shaking his head in refusal when I in- vited him to the baek seat. I asked him about big buildings in the area. There was a labor office at Ampfing-the Or- ganisation Todt Bureau-and a school at Muhldorf. He thought there was a hos- pital at Muhldorf, too. Did he know of any Wehrmacht food or supply depots in thia areal No, he did not think there were any. What about clothing and beds ? The school at Muhldorf had been converted into barracks and had plenty of good beds, but he did not know about clothes. Any water or electricity there ? He did not know but he understood that the building had been hit by a bomb. We returned to Ampfing and were directed to the O.T. Bureau. It was a one-story building of two wings leading from a central reception hall. The wings were divided into rooms filled with desks and other office furniture. There was only one flush toilet, but there were sev- |
13 eral hand sinks; a weat trickle of water came from the faucets. The electric cur- rent was off. An adjoining building had a large kitchen with wood-burning ranges and the inevitable 600-liter Ger- man soup kettles. I was covering the buildings with rapid strides, mentally placing the patients, beds, and medical equipment. A German in the mustard-yellow uniform of the Todt labor corps attached himself to us, running ahead, opening doors. He opened his mouth several times to ask me something, thought better of it, and screwed up his face in a quizzical expression. The O.T. building was suitable and could house 150 people with some crowd- ing. I turned to the German. "Are you in charge here?" I barked, and Andre translated. "Good. Then in two hours I want every piece of furniture out of this building and all the rooms swept and clean. Leave only the beds, if you have any, and one chair in each room. I shall order the mayor to furnish help, but it is your responsibility." The Ger- man snapped to attention and began to speak rapidly to Andre. "He wants to know if he can stay here. He has one small room." "Tell him we are bring- ing typhus patients in here and to get out in two hours but only after the work is done." The German's face responded to the word Fleksfeber (typhus), and he did an about-face. Mike drove back to the bakery and we entered its warm, yeasty atmosphere. An ample woman met us, wiping her hands on an apron. I demanded the mayor, and he emerged from a back room. "All right," I said, backing him up against the wall, "now listen. Get fifty strong people, anybody, and get them to work at once. You know the O.T. Bureau? Good. Clean it up, all furniture out. We are bringing concen- tration camp people in there, typhus, starved. Get fifty women and have each one bring a pail of hot water, soap, wash- cloths, and towels. These women are to wash up the poor people. Get food: chicken or meat broth, mashed potatoes, little bread, enough for 150 people. The | 14 kitchen. Have them bring cups, plates, knives, forks, and spoons. All this must be done by two o 'clock, three hours from now." The mayor looked a bit dazed and counted on his fingers. "Fifty people, food for 150, soap, towels-what are we to do with the furniture?" "Throw it out of the windows, anything. There is a court in back of the building. Stack it up there. I want it neat. Yon know the penalty if all this is not done?" The baker gulped and tugged at his collar. "It is hard, very hard." I looked as ferocious as I could and snapped my riding crop against my shoe. "At once!" The mayor edged himself away from the wall and ran out of the door. I could hear his voice sum- moning someone. "Now," I said to Andre, "are you sure about those beds?" "Oh, yes," said my guide, "unless they have been destroyed." "You stay here and keep the mayor on his toes-you understand. see that he does everything that I or- dered. I'm going for ambulances; and trucks to get those beds. I'll be back in about two hours." I had my fingers crossed at this point. Back in Dorfen I gave Van a summary of our findings. '' "We need a medical unit in there, ambulances, and hospital rations." Van thought for a moment. "Blood plasma," he said, '' vitamins-'' "Food and care,'' I said. "And every hour means literally another life." Van picked up the telephone. "How many ambulances can you get along with?" he asked. ''About a half dozen, and a couple of trucks." I was using estimates that were a carry-over from the early, skimpy G5 days. Van reached the 187th Medical Battalion and in less than twenty minutes arranged for a platoon of the 662nd Clearing Company to take over the treatment of the con- centration camp patients; seven ambu- lances and two trucks; rations and medi- cal supplies. This was almost too good to be true. |
15 In less than an hour Mike and I were out on the highway where the medical bat- talion was bivouacked; ambulances and trucks were lined up in readiness on the field. I outlined my plan to the officer in charge. We would return to Ampfing, I would proceed to Muhldorf with the trucks to pick up the beds, and the ambulances and a guide would start for the camp a half hour later. Several trips would be required to evacuate all the people. The medical platoon would arrange reception at Ampfing. When we returned the O.T. Bureau was a beehive of activity. Most of the furniture had been stacked up in the court, and numerous papers, forms, and books were lying around in the halls. I could almost hear the yelps of complaint from some intelligence officer as he sur- veyed the damaged records, many of which were already burning merrily in the court; I ordered the rest deposited in a room over the kitchen. Women were scrubbing floors, and children were run- ning about. Some American soldiers had drifted in, adding to the confusion. and the mayor came running, asking what the time was. I ordered everyone out but the actual workers. The kitchen was also buzzing with activity. Kettles were steaming, and all the utensils were sparkling bright. Cups, plates, and the cutlery were in neat array on the tables. Andre and his friend from the bakery were sitting in one corner, munching huge crusts of bread. "You think we could stay here, sir?" Andre asked, "There are rooms above the kitchen-'' '' Sure,'' I said, '' you 'll be needed. But now let's get those beds. And your friend can show the ambulances the way to the camp." We drove off, the two trucks following. On the right was a bluff with a cathedral and some large buildings overlooking the river. "Ecksberg Convent," said Andre. I filed the information in my head. We were not supposed to disturb religions installations, but often the Ger- mans had already converted them to other purposes, and it was then assumed that their use was not prohibited. | 16 Muhldorf appeared suddenly as we emerged on the other side of a bridge. The north section of the town was badly beaten up. The streets were empty, but as we drove along, people began to come out, and suddenly the streets were filled. The town was still under daylight cur- few. I told Mike to stop, and Andre called out to the Germans to assemble. They came forward hesitatingly. Andre trans- lated that I wanted ten men to climb up on the trucks to help me load things for about a half hour. There were no vol- unteers, so I pointed to the huskiest specimens and ordered them on the trucks. None was below forty years of age. The towns of Germany had long since been drained of younger man- power. The school was a few blocks to the right and consisted of two stone build- ings. One had been converted into bar- racks, and a gaping hole in the roof showed where a bomb had penetrated three stories of the building. It must have been a faulty explosive because the walls were still standing. Rain had increased the damage, and much of the plaster was on the floor or ready to drop. The place was filled with cumbersome double-decker wooden beds with gunny sacks stuffed with straw as bedding. A few of these beds would fill our trucks, and not many of our patients would be able to climb to the upper decks. The straw-filled bags, however, would serve as mattresses. I ordered 160 of them to be loaded and told the drivers to see that only clean, untorn ones were taken. The Germans went to work. I decided to explore the other building. The door was unlocked, and Andre and I entered a number of schoolrooms, with desks, blackboards, and other parapher nalia. Behind the teachers' desks were Nazi flags and pictures of Hitler. On the second floor was an office and a small apartment. The bed had been occupied recently, and butts of American ciga- rettes were scattered on the floor. Some of the butts were stained with lipstick. A civilian suit was hanging on a hook. "Why don't you put this on and discard |
17 your outfit ?" I asked Andre. He looked at the suit and tried on the coat. "If you don't mind, Major, if you please," he said, "may I keep my clothes ? This coat is warm and I could use it, though." The concentration camp uniform had become a badge of honor and survival and was usually re- tained by the liberated inmates as they wandered over the roads of Germany. The trucks were now loaded with the straw mattresses, and I dismissed the sweating Germans. We headed back to Ampfing. The ambulances had already left. "Mike," I said, "you get yourself a handful of Germans and get these mattresses into the hospital. You'll have to put five or six in each room-and see that the rooms are clean.'' Mike jumped to his tasks. Trucks and jeeps began to draw up at the gate. The personnel of the medical platoon selected one room for treatment and dressings, another one for an office, and began to unload their medical sup- plies. It was certainly not what a hos- pital should have been, but it was the best we could do. The work was not completed before the ambulances returned. The faces of the drivers were grim. As the first few stretchers appeared, some passing Amer- ican soldiers and Germans stopped and watched silently from a distance. Only a few of the patients were on stretchers; the rest had been packed in sitting, eight to each ambulance. They began to come out. Men without clothing, without hair, without flesh, sores on their legs, their knees larger in girth than their thighs, a filthy piece of blanket around their groins. They stumbled and fell as they tried to navigate the three steps into the place before someone could help them. They shuffled a few steps forward and rested, exhausted, and looked around in wonder. A gasp came from the onlookers. The Americans swore. The German women wrung their hands. "Mein Gott, Mein Gott!" they moaned, and it was not an act. Two | 18 women who had been cleaning up the hall stood transfixed. "How can it be !" they cried and dropped their brooms to help a stumbling Jew. Mike rushed for- ward. "Hitler's work. You ought to be proud of it!" he yelled at the women in English. I told him to help place the patients. The macabre procession continued. It included some men in relatively better condition, dressed in striped suits, who introduced themselves as doctors. Doris emerged from the last ambulance. "We miscounted," she said. "They thought we meant just what they call the hos- pital camp. In the next compound there are about as many, although not as bad as these." I told the sergeant in charge of the ambulance crew to inform Colonel Hopkins that no more than 150 could be accommodated here and that we would have to leave the rest until new facilities could be established. The cook and half of the doctors were to be left at the camp, along with all available food. "And I have brought the woman with the child," said Doris. I caught sight of the mayor's coattails and yelled for him and for Andre. "See that woman ?" I said, pointing to the ambu- lance by which she stood. "She is to be taken in by your best family in town. She will be given a room, clothing, and rations. A layette for the child. They will be your direct responsibility. And if they are not treated better than an Obergruppenleiter. ..." I snapped my riding crop. The mayor wiped his brow. "Ya, ya," he said, "it will be done immediately." He ran down the steps, talked to the woman, pointed back at me, and they disappeared up the street. A patient shuffled across the hall. Starvation and disease had washed out all individuality. This skeleton was tiny, a boy that could not have been over fifteen years old. He stumbled up to Doris, dropped on his knees, and grasped her hands. "Danke, danke," he sobbed, kissing her hands. A medical corps man led him off. Another stretcher was entering the door. The man on it was not breathing. |
19 A thin line of bloody saliva had dried around the drooping corner of his mouth; on his face was a look of peace and hope, set in death. '' Where do you want the body?" asked the stretcher bearers. They put him against the wall in the hall and covered him with a blanket. The hospital was now starting to function, and the medical platoon was taking over. A Hungarian doctor was directing cases with obvious fever to the isolation rooms; a clerk in a striped suit was attempting to get the names; the German women without further direction, disbelief in their eyes, were starting to wash up the tortured bodies. Out of the kitchen other women were carrying big trays and caldrons of food. I stopped them. "A cup of soup, a spoon of mashed potatoes, a small slice of bread only," I said. These men needed fluid, glucose in their veins, more than anything else. I went into the room set aside as the office. Andre and another comrade were arranging some papers. Andre had picked up a typewriter somewhere. "I have some records," he said, "the list of the guards. I tried to keep the names of the people in the camp, but that is incomplete. Mostly we had just num- bers." I took the list of the guards and thumbed through the pages. Most of the names were Hungarian. "Good," I said, "I'll see that this gets into proper hands." "This is my comrade," said Andre. "He would like to &tay here, too." The man was very short and stocky; his face was chalky, his hair almost pure white. "I am from Budapest," he said slowly in German. '' I am a writer, thirty years old. I thank you. My wife is in London. Is there any way of writing to her?" He looked up at me beseechingly and repeated his statement word for word in the same monotonous tone. "You will have to refer to the medical officer, the captain who will be in charge. Perhaps he will have something for you to do.'' Once more the man repeated his speech. I knew there was no way at the moment for the man to reach his wife. | 20 "Look," I said, "supposing you write a note, and I shall see what I can do. Perhaps the Red Cross-'' The man felt on the table for a piece of paper, grabbed a pencil, and poised it over the sheet. He shook his head and suddenly started to cry. "I can't remember her name or her address. For two years all I have done is repeat her name and address and now I can't remember. Please wait, please-" I sat down to study the list of guards and waited. Finally I left him with his grief. The ambulances were now pulling up at the gate with the second load of patients. Some soldiers wandered in and had to be cleared out. A chaplain ran up the steps. "What horror," he exclaimed, "how terrible! Major, how can you stand it? What can I do?" There was no obvious reply to all this, so I let him stand and look at the starved patients as they stumbled or were led through the hall. Finally he murmured something about starting religious ser- vices, and ran bouncingly down the steps. Hop arrived with the last ambulance of the third trip. His clothes were chalky with DDT powder, his shoes were muddy, and his face lined with fatigue. It had been a hard decision to leave some of the people at the camp. The cook had complained that there was no discipline any more. There was enough food for another day or two, and Hop had ar- ranged to have the delivery of water continued by horse-drawn tank. He in- spected our improvised hospital and went out with Andre to see the mayor about restoring the water supply and the electricity. Doris came running. "Those German women are going to kill them. Did you see what they were feeding them ?" Instead of a little broth and potatoes, the women were ladling out heaps of mashed potatoes, huge pieces of boiled meat, and slices of gray bread at least two inches thick. When the plates could hold no more, they served them to the men who had been washed up or passed them to the clutching hands of naked men who had stumbled and shoved their way to |
21 the food. Those who could sit up or stand were gulping the food like ravenous beasts. And those too weak to stand or sit were being fed by spoon. It was useless to intervene now; we would have a riot to quell. All I could do was to order the portions cut. I fully anticipated mortality from this unorthodox method of treating starvation. Next day, however, we learned that except for a few eases of vomiting no untoward effects had been noted. There was little else for us to do. The medical platoon was now in charge. They had set up the treatment room and were starting to examine methodically each patient, to establish a diagnosis, and to start therapy. The administrative officer was making out his list of needed supplies, and the residence across the street was being converted into quarters for the staff. The moribund men had been started on intravenous glucose infusions. We assembled to five concentration camp doctors who had come with the ambulances and introduced them to the officers of the medical platoon The doctors were instructed to stay and to assist in all possible ways. I promised to keep headquarters stimulated on supplies and hospital rations. We shook hands all around; the doctors in the striped suits looked proud and determined. Next day the change in the patients at Ampfing was almost unbelievable. The medical platoon had worked all night. All the cases had been seen, examined, and recorded, including twelve cases of presumptive typhus; sulfa and other drugs were controlling the diarrheas; and only one man had died. The pinched faces of the patients were relaxed, and many of the men were sitting up on their straw mattresses holding a piece of brown paper with granulated sugar on it. They had requested that this wonderful confection not be put on the cereal they had for breakfast and instead they were now eating it granule by granule. "The first in a year, the first in a year," they repeated, smacking their lips. German women were scrub- bing the floor. One crouched in front | 22 of a patient who was describing his pre- vious activities as a lawyer and lecturing on the sins of the Germans, waving a long finger under her nose. Rumor from the usual unreliable sources now had it that the war would soon be over, The radio was full of news of German Army groups surrendering, of German anils fleeing from the Russians, of more contacts between American and Russian armies, of advances, final thrusts. We were too busy to notice. During the following few days we evacuated another concentration camp, set up another hospital at the Ecksberg Convent, inspected the labor camps in the area, and reviewed the civilian medical facilities at Mühldorf. On May 8 there were speeches and announcements. It was the official Y-E Day, but in Dorfen it was just another day. Trucks rumbled over the dusty roads, soldiers stood their formations. displaced persons wandered through the streets, and German soldiers filled the POW enclosures to overflowing. The German civilians still looked dazed and servile. It was not until Churchill's stentorian "Advance, Brittania!" came over the air that Public Health Team Number Two caught some of the spirit of the occasion; we toasted the victory with the last of our whiskey. Two slightly inebriated soldiers on the steps below were singing ''White Christmas'' to the accompaniment of a liberated accordian when we finally went to bed. Before I could go to sleep that night, I saw eaunt men in striped suits on the roads, in camps for displaced persons, slowly making their way home. But they had no home. The road for them had just begun. |