ravensbruck
By celticman
- 2348 reads
Night shift in the sewing lager. The guard on duty allows each group of prisoners to sing Stille Nacht. The Poles are reluctant but even the Jewish prisoners join in. Some pass tiny gifts, mangers made out of straw, and stars made from scrap paper to each other.
Hard frost, a howling wind, snow falling and lying on the roofs of the blocks. SS-Untersturmführer Max Koegel’s breathe smells of rum to warm him up on the inside. The death’s-head insignia of skull and crossbones, and braid on the hard visor. His peeked cap is too tight on his balding head. He stamps his leather boots under his greatcoat to keep out the cold.
Behind him stands Johanna Langefeld and inclines her head towards him and listens to the rise and falling beat of the distant hymn. They could be a dumpy husband and wife, but she has an adolescent child, out of wedlock. Both have fallen on hard times and risen through the ranks. She has been appointed by Riechsfuhrer Heinrich Himmler as the chief female guard, and runs the camp efficiently. Her bobbed hair is swept up over her head and kept in place with a clasp hidden by a soft envelope cap of feldgrau wool, the kind worn by Hitler youth or women. Her uniform is no different from the other guards, short jacket and white, crisp and open-neck blouse, long skirt and black tights and shiny, black, ankle boots. For outside work, she has a black cape over her shoulder and soft leather gloves and she kneads the two arthritic fingers on her left hand back and forth, chafing them to keep the circulation moving.
Rows of shivering prisoners in thin cotton, striped, uniforms stand to attention with their chests out. Langefeld has her spies and makes it her job to know the troublemaker’s faces, but this is an insurrection that demands the presence of the camp commandant. Lilac triangles, and a purple bar, on their chests, mark them out as Jehovah Witnesses.
Blockova, Bertha Liedmater has them sound Appel off in sing-song fives. Eins, swie, drie… Jehovah Witnesses, forty in total, finishes in a strident note.
Bertha stares inside the underground bunker dimly lit by the reflection of falling snow. Hospital workers scrape skin and cloth and the tattoo of frozen bodies from the stone floors of the cells. Marked as communists by their red triangle, they work as a team, piling corpses on to the back of an open truck, the camp hearse, with no need to chain shut the tailgates. Nobody will make a run for it.
The truck driver has received extra rations in the SS canteen and some schnapps. Engine chokes, then running on grey-blue fumes to heat up the cab, which leave a haze and metallic taste in the air coming off the lake.
Laundry workers, asocials, prostitutes from Berlin, with their black triangles, have a cushy number on the raised platform. Skilled at massaging ghost-coloured limbs in moonlight, they snap curved claws of wooden fingers and undress those that have gone beyond the little death of orgasm. Frozen dummies with their mouths ajar, they search for false teeth and spectacles that have fallen, which they put beside crutches and bandages. Staring glass eyes uncaring of decorum look back at them. Their stiff and bloodied clothes taken back to the Effektenkammer to be quickly washed for reuse. Nothing wasted but lives.
Kogel opens his mouth to address the prisoners, but instead turns to Langefeld, whispers and wanders away back to the heat of the office block, with his hands behind his back, whistling Stille Nacht .
Bertha squints sideways as the chief women guard addresses her subordinates in matching caps and capes. The lorry rumbles away towards the shooting gallery leaving grey slush track in the falling snow. Bertha takes off her striped hat, while gazing at Langefeld’s feet and that of two guards who have appeared beside her with Alsatian dogs, their coats sleek, but protected from the cold by a cape fastened under their chin and emblazoned with the daggers sign, SS. The dogs open mouths slobber, a guttural growl escapes from the back of their throats as the choke chain is pulled to silence them.
‘With the greatest respect it is against the will of Jehovah and contrary to our beliefs to assist in your war work.’
‘The work I’ve asked you to do to sew fur on to collars is not strictly war work, but, in any case, your refusal must be punished. We’ll give you a week in the bunker, bread and water on alternate days and check on you next week to see if your answer has changed.’
She nods her head and Bertha takes the lead, the others fall in behind, shuffling in step, snow sticking to their wooden clogs. A prisoner twists her ankle and stumbles. The dogs are let off their choke chains, bound and pounce. Her arms shoot up and hands out and fingers clawing to protect herself, but the weight of well-fed beasts and their teeth with the first taste of blood drives them to frenzy. One rips at her face, tears her nose and comes away with a part of her cheek in its mouth, before snapping at her lips and throat. The other savages her thigh and leg, its massive head jerking her body back and forth, back and forth in the falling snow.
Her shrieks echo around the quadrangle, the high walls and beyond the low-pitch roofs of the SS guard's houses, outside the camp and is taken up by wood pigeons cooing in the lindenbaum trees and the cobbled lane that marks the path to the camp, and out beyond the vast and frozen lake, where the church steeple of Fustenberg can be seen in the distance and catches the eye from the camp gates.
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Comments
bleak, cold (both ways) -
bleak, cold (both ways) - very graphically laid out here. Is this a one off, or more to come?
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Something very different from
Something very different from you Jack.
Jenny.
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Hi CM,
Hi CM,
This is convincing . I'm wondering if you were there ! It is very different as Jenny says !!!
Hilary
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Yeah real bleak and
Yeah real bleak and atmospheric, was totally pulled in, hope there's more of this
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So cold and harsh. This is
So cold and harsh. This is very convincing, how bleak some people's lives were and are still. I think I would like to read another part celticman.
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A very effective bleak piece.
A very effective bleak piece. You do have a great talent for highlighting the horrors of the awful Nazi system and showcasing the reality of its cruelty. I like the way you show the different categories of prisoner and explain the different jobs given to them; the Jehovah's Witnesses, the Communists, the asocials and prostitutes, Poles and Jews.
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The stark style is so fitting
The stark style is so fitting to the content.
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This is our facebook and
This is our facebook and twitter pick of the day - do share!
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