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Phoenix
21st July 2010, 04:00 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100720/ap_on_re_eu/eu_poland_escape_from_auschwitz_1


Former inmate recalls daring escape from Auschwitz

By MONIKA SCISLOWSKA, Associated Press Writer Monika Scislowska, Associated Press Writer – Tue Jul 20, 9:23 am ET

NOWY TARG, Poland – With every step toward the gate, Jerzy Bielecki was certain he would be shot.

The day was July 21, 1944. Bielecki was walking in broad daylight down a pathway at Auschwitz, wearing a stolen SS uniform with his Jewish sweetheart Cyla Cybulska by his side.

His knees buckling with fear, he tried to keep a stern bearing on the long stretch of gravel to the sentry post.

The German guard frowned at his forged pass and eyed the two for a period that seemed like an eternity — then uttered the miraculous words: "Ja, danke" — yes, thank you — and let Jerzy and Cyla out of the death camp and into freedom.

It was a common saying among Auschwitz inmates that the only way out was through the crematorium chimneys. These were among the few ever to escape through the side door.

The 23-year-old Bielecki used his relatively privileged position as a German-speaking Catholic Pole to orchestrate the daring rescue of his Jewish girlfriend who was doomed to die.

"It was great love," Bielecki, now 89, recalled in an interview at his home in this small southern town 55 miles (85 kilometers) from Auschwitz.

"We were making plans that we would get married and would live together forever."

Bielecki was 19 when the Germans seized him on the false suspicion he was a resistance fighter, and brought to the camp in April 1940 in the first transport of inmates, all Poles.

He was given number 243 and was sent to work in warehouses, where occasional access to additional food offered some chance of survival.

It was two years before the first mass transports of Jews started arriving in 1942. Most of the Jews were taken straight to the gas chambers of neighboring Birkenau, while a few were designated to be forced laborers amid horrific conditions, allowing them to postpone death.

In September 1943 Bielecki was assigned to a grain storage warehouse. Another inmate was showing him around when suddenly a door opened and a group of girls walked in.

"It seemed to me that one of them, a pretty dark-haired one, winked at me," Bielecki said with a broad smile as he recalled the scene. It was Cyla — who had just been assigned to repair grain sacks.

Their friendship grew into love, as the warehouse offered brief chances for more face-to-face meetings.

In a report she wrote for the Auschwitz memorial in 1983, Cybulska recalled that during the meetings they told each other their life stories and "every meeting was a truly important event for both of us."

Cybulska, her parents, two brothers and a younger sister were rounded up in January 1943 in the Lomza ghetto in northern Poland and taken to Auschwitz-Birkenau. Her parents and sister were immediately killed in the gas chambers, but she and her brothers were sent to work.

By September, 22-year-old Cybulska was the only one left alive, with inmate number 29558 tattooed on her left forearm.

As their love blossomed, Bielecki began working on the daring plan for escape.

From a fellow Polish inmate working at a uniform warehouse he secretly got a complete SS uniform and a pass. Using an eraser and a pencil, he changed the officer's name in the pass from Rottenfuehrer Helmut Stehler to Steiner just in case the guard knew the real Stehler, and filled it in to say an inmate was being led out of the camp for police interrogation at a nearby station. He secured some food, a razor for himself and a sweater and boots for Cybulska.

He briefed her on his plan: "Tomorrow an SS-man will come to take you for an interrogation. The SS-man will be me."

The next afternoon, Bielecki, dressed in the stolen uniform, came to the laundry barrack where Cybulska had been moved for work duty. Sweating with fear, he demanded the German supervisor release the woman.

Bielecki led her out of the barrack and onto a long path leading to a side gate guarded by the sleepy SS-man who let them go through.

The fear of being gunned down remained with him in his first steps of freedom: "I felt pain in my backbone, where I was expecting to be shot," Bielecki said.

But when he eventually looked back, the guard was in his booth. They walked on to a road, then into fields where they hid in dense bushes until dark, when they started to march.

"Marching across fields and woods was very exhausting, especially for me, not used to such intensive walks," Cybulska said in her report to Auschwitz as quoted in a Polish-language book Bielecki has written, "He Who Saves One Life ..."

"Far from any settlements, we had to cross rivers," she wrote. "When water was high ... Jurek carried me to the other side."

At one point she was too tired to walk and asked him to leave her.

"Jurek did not want to hear that and kept repeating: 'we fled together and will walk on together,'" she reported, referring to Jerzy by his Polish diminutive.

For nine nights they moved under the cover of darkness toward Bielecki's uncle's home in a village not far from Krakow.

His mother, who was living at the house, was overjoyed to see him alive, though wasted-away after four years at Auschwitz. A devout Catholic, however, she was dead-set against him marrying a Jewish girl.

"How will you live? How will you raise your children?" Bielecki recalls her asking.

To keep her away from possible Nazi patrols, Cybulska was hidden on a nearby farm. Bielecki decided to go into hiding in Krakow — a fateful choice they believed would improve their chances of avoiding capture by the Nazis. The couple spent their last night together under a pear tree in an orchard, saying their goodbyes and making plans to meet right after the war.

After the Soviet army rolled through Krakow in January 1945, Bielecki left the city where he had been hiding from Nazi pursuit and walked 25-miles (40-kilometers) along snow-covered roads to meet Cybulska at the farmhouse.

But he was four days too late.

Cybulska, not aware that the area where she had been hiding had been liberated three weeks before Krakow, gave up waiting for him, concluding her "Juracek" either was dead or had abandoned their plans.

She got on a train to Warsaw, planning to find an uncle in the United States. On the train she met a Jewish man, David Zacharowitz, and the two began a relationship and eventually married. They headed to Sweden, then to Cybulska's uncle in New York, who helped them start a jewelry business. Zacharowitz died in 1975.

In Poland, Bielecki eventually started a family of his own and worked as the director of a school for car mechanics. He had no news of Cybulska and had no way of finding her.

In her report Cybulska said that she was haunted in the years after she left Poland by a wish to see her hometown and to find Jurek, if he was alive.

Sheer chance made her wish come true.

While talking to her Polish cleaning woman in 1982, Cybulska related her Auschwitz escape story.

The woman was stunned.

"I know the story, I saw a man on Polish TV saying he had led his Jewish girlfriend out of Auschwitz," the cleaning lady told Cybulska, according to Bielecki.

She tracked down his phone number and one early morning in May 1983 the telephone rang in Bielecki's apartment in Nowy Targ.

"I heard someone laughing — or crying — on the phone and then a female voice said "Juracku, this is me, your little Cyla," Bielecki recalls.

A few weeks later they met at Krakow airport. He brought 39 red roses, one for each year they spent apart. She visited him in Poland many times, and they jointly visited the Auschwitz memorial, the farmer family that hid her and many other places, staying together in hotels.

"The love started to come back," Bielecki said.

"Cyla was telling me: leave your wife, come with me to America," he recalls. "She cried a lot when I told her: Look, I have such fine children, I have a son, how could I do that?"

She returned to New York and wrote to him: "Jurek I will not come again," Bielecki recalled.

They never met again and she did not reply to his letters.

Cybulska died a few years later in New York in 2002.

In 1985, the Yad Vashem Institute in Jerusalem awarded Bielecki the Righteous Among the Nations title for saving Cybulska. The institute's website account of the escape and its aftermath is consistent with Bielecki's account to The Associated Press.

"I was very much in love with Cyla, very much," Bielecki said. "Sometimes I cried after the war, that she was not with me. I dreamed of her at night and woke up crying."

"Fate decided for us, but I would do the same again."

Gypsybiker45
21st July 2010, 04:32 PM
Good story.

Phoenix
21st July 2010, 04:34 PM
Good story.


I certainly wouldn't want to live in a concentration camp, but every one of these stories that comes out, including those of Anne Frank and Elie the Wiesel, demonstrates that Auschwitz-Birkenau was exactly what the Germans claimed it was: a labor camp, not an "extermination" camp.

shakinginmyshoes
21st July 2010, 04:36 PM
There have been far too many fraudulent claims and "stories" from "holocaust survivors" for me to believe any of them, anymore.

Phoenix
21st July 2010, 04:39 PM
There have been far too many fraudulent claims and "stories" from "holocaust survivors" for me to believe any of them, anymore.




This gal, Anne Frank, and Elie the Wiesel are three of the many that "miraculously" survived the "showers" at Auschwitz. WHY?

Ponce
21st July 2010, 04:44 PM
And they had kids who are now Zionists and killing Palestinians.........I hope to see the same story but of Palestinians scaping the Nazi-Zionists.

sirgonzo420
21st July 2010, 04:47 PM
There have been far too many fraudulent claims and "stories" from "holocaust survivors" for me to believe any of them, anymore.




Howdy and welcome shakinginmyshoes!

Care to share your former GIM name?

I know you have one!


;D

Phoenix
21st July 2010, 04:48 PM
And they had kids who are now Zionists and killing Palestinians.........I hope to see the same story but of Palestinians scaping the Nazi-Zionists.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rafah_Border_Crossing

shakinginmyshoes
21st July 2010, 04:50 PM
This gal, Anne Frank, and Elie the Wiesel are three of the many that "miraculously" survived the "showers" at Auschwitz. WHY?

Yeah. Head-scratcher, huh?

I always thought Germans were known for efficiency.

Rather inefficient way to go about exterminating some people, if that's your goal.

The NKVD in Bolshevik Russia had a *much* simpler idea when they executed the Holodomor on the Ukrainians: Starve them to death. More efficient and effective, too, killed 10-20 million in one fell swoop. You'd think Himmler would have taken a lesson or two from Genrikh Yagoda.

(Or maybe it was the actions of Yagoda / NKVD that made Himmler think rounding up the Jews where he could keep an eye on them would be a good idea.)

shakinginmyshoes
21st July 2010, 04:52 PM
There have been far too many fraudulent claims and "stories" from "holocaust survivors" for me to believe any of them, anymore.




Howdy and welcome shakinginmyshoes!

Care to share your former GIM name?

I know you have one!


;D


Thanks! It was shakinginmyshoes there, too. On kitco, too, until they tossed me out on my ear.

shakinginmyshoes
21st July 2010, 04:56 PM
Hey, Gonzo,
my old Nemesis,
did you get tired of getting banned there, too?

Look forward to squashing all your arguments!

sirgonzo420
21st July 2010, 05:10 PM
Hey, Gonzo,
my old Nemesis,
did you get tired of getting banned there, too?

Look forward to squashing all your arguments!


I think you're thinking about someone else.

I've never argued with a poster called "shakinginmyshoes", and besides, my arguments are immaculate anyway.

shakinginmyshoes
21st July 2010, 05:12 PM
I think you're Gonzo, all right.

On gim2, you used to insist I was some other nutcase posting under another name.

But I am:

Pro-White
Gun-clinging
Woman.

Now it's sir, huh? Who knighted ya?

Don't tell me you don't remember. You'll crush an old floozy's self-esteem that way.
I thought knights were supposed to be chivalrous.

Ash_Williams
21st July 2010, 05:15 PM
I heard a lot of stories from an older relative before he passed away. He and his wife had been over there the entire time, a young couple back then. This type of thing went down constantly, as no one ever knew wtf was happening. That sums up all his stories. It was confusion. A wrong move could get you gunned down in the street. The enemy was often kinder than the ally. Uniforms meant a lot... if the Russians captured you and they were nice they'd say to go change into street clothes, then you'll be civilians, and civilians don't be sent to the work camps. No one wanted to fight and get shot, so as a group they'd wait around so they could surrender to the Russians

No facial recognition software back then, no fingerprint or retina scanners... the next time people are being worked to death their escape won't be so easy...

sirgonzo420
21st July 2010, 05:24 PM
I think you're Gonzo, all right.

On gim2, you used to insist I was some other nutcase posting under another name.

But I am:

Pro-White
Gun-clinging
Woman.

Now it's sir, huh? Who knighted ya?

Don't tell me you don't remember. You'll crush a lady's self-esteem that way.
I thought knights were supposed to be chivalrous.






Hahahahhahahahahahahahahahahahhahahahaha!


You think I'm PERCIVAL!

Percival/pax/masonicplot/cosmo/etc... posts under the name 'gonzo' at GIM2.

I am not percival... lol.


I am a Pro-White, Gun-Clinging Man.

I am not jewish, nor am I an SPLC attorney.

shakinginmyshoes
21st July 2010, 05:27 PM
OOOOPS!

Sorry.

I just read some of your back posts here -- you definitely are NOT Gonzo.

Heartfelt apologies!
Nice to meetcha, Sir Gonzo.

sirgonzo420
21st July 2010, 05:42 PM
OOOOPS!

Sorry.

I just read some of your back posts here -- you definitely are NOT Gonzo.

Heartfelt apologies!
Nice to meetcha, Sir Gonzo.


;D

Nice to meet you too!

JDRock
21st July 2010, 06:04 PM
There have been far too many fraudulent claims and "stories" from "holocaust survivors" for me to believe any of them, anymore.




Me 2

General of Darkness
21st July 2010, 07:08 PM
Don't you guys understand, Miracles constantly happen around jews. My favorite is the Israeli astronaut's diary that died in the Discovery accident. While the Space Shuttle was traveling at 17,000 miles an hour upon re-entry and on fire the jews diary survived, kinda like another diary written in ball point that didn't exist for the time. What's up with jews and diaries?

Here's a link to the impossible story of the jew astronauts diary.

http://www.universetoday.com/2008/10/06/astronaut-diary-survives-columbia-accident/

Silver Rocket Bitches!
21st July 2010, 07:27 PM
What a heart felt piece of propaganda.

I just love fiction.

Liquid
21st July 2010, 07:41 PM
It was two years before the first mass transports of Jews started arriving in 1942. Most of the Jews were taken straight to the gas chambers of neighboring Birkenau, while a few were designated to be forced laborers amid horrific conditions....

Right, it was all a labor camp. A labor camp for a 'few' jews perhaps, let's focus on that...and ignore the other millions murdered.

Phoenix
21st July 2010, 08:14 PM
It was two years before the first mass transports of Jews started arriving in 1942. Most of the Jews were taken straight to the gas chambers of neighboring Birkenau, while a few were designated to be forced laborers amid horrific conditions....

Right, it was all a labor camp. A labor camp for a 'few' jews perhaps, let's focus on that...and ignore the other millions murdered.


WHAT "millions murdered"? Bodies? Ashes? Entries in a log book? ANYTHING?

Liquid
21st July 2010, 08:35 PM
WHAT "millions murdered"? Bodies? Ashes? Entries in a log book? ANYTHING?


When I was there, I stood there and viewed a whole room full of hair, and another room full of shoes...may not be millions of them, but thousands upon thousands of them.

If you hurry, you may even get the chance to talk to some folks who were alive at that time.

I'm sorry, I'm much more persuaded by the folks I've talked to, and the places I've visited.

mamboni
21st July 2010, 08:43 PM
I have a good friend who cavorts with a certain Professor at a University in New Jersey. This Professor has devoted his scholarly career to studying the "Holocaust." This Professor asserts on no uncertain terms that the "Holocaust" is a complete and total fabrication and hoax. I happen to agree.

Phoenix
21st July 2010, 10:40 PM
When I was there, I stood there and viewed a whole room full of hair, and another room full of shoes...may not be millions of them, but thousands upon thousands of them.


Logic, please. What does a "whole room full of hair" and a "room full of shoes" prove?

I'm sure you're aware of what typhus is, and you're probably aware of how it's spread?




If you hurry, you may even get the chance to talk to some folks who were alive at that time.


Actually, my grandmother was an Ukrainian Ostarbeiter, in Germany.

If Hitler was out to "get" the Jews, how is it so many "survived" the Zyklon?




I'm sorry, I'm much more persuaded by the folks I've talked to, and the places I've visited.


Have you ever pondered why someone would lie about such things as "gas chambers"? Are you aware that billions upon billions have been extorted from Germany? Do you think that would have been possible if it was admitted that there were no "gas chambers" and was no "extermination plan"?

chad
22nd July 2010, 07:16 AM
i haven't been to auschwitz, but i have ben to several others.

there is no possible way the official story makes any sort of sense if you have been there and stood next to the "ovens."

sirgonzo420
22nd July 2010, 07:25 AM
i haven't been to auschwitz, but i have ben to several others.

there is no possible way the official story makes any sort of sense if you have been there and stood next to the "ovens."


I've never been to any of them and probably won't ever go see them, but here's a video put together by a jewish fella named David Cole.

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=976870941610001004#docid=-741565070797208303

mamboni
22nd July 2010, 07:50 AM
Zyklon-B is a solid toxin developed to kill typhus-carrying fleas. It is a solid that sublimates (slowly) into gaseous HCN (hydrogen cyanide) when exposed to air. HCN is an extremely poor means of executing people. In fact, when the HCN gas chambers were tried in the 1950-60s in the United States, it was discovered that it is very difficult to kill someone with HCN. Not only does it take a long time, but it is not painless and requires extremely careful dosing. And venting of the HCN gas is a huge problem (for the record, the US gas chambers utilized cyanide salt dropped into concentrated acid, a far more rapid and consistent means of generating HCN gas vis-a-vis Zyklon-b). These are the reasons why the gas chamber was soon abandoned as a means of executing condemned prisoners in the US.

The Nuremburg trials featured a grand total of two witnesses claiming that the Nazis engaged in systematic extermination of the Jews in so-called death camps. These witness' testimony totalled about 20 minutes (out of hundreds of hours of testimony at the trials) and were not corroborated. One witness claimed that at Auschwitz, Zyklon-b granules were sprinkled into openings in the roof of the gas chamber/shower as a means to gas dozens of victims inside. There are many problems with this assertion. One is the slow rate of Zyklon-b sublimation into HCN gas. The other is the interesting fact of chemistry: that hydrogen cyanide gas is lighter than air and under these circumstances would float upwards away from the building. In any event, even if enough gas could be delivered to the chamber interior, the deaths would have required hours. And after, it would be extremely dangerous to remove the cyanide-laden bodies as they would be highly toxic. The staff clearing the bodies would have to wear occlusive uniforms and gas masks that scrub cyanide. And the bodies could not be burned because they would release massive amounts of toxic gas. If the bodies were buried, they would not decompose and would remain fairly well preserved in the ground as witness to the crime: cyanide is an astounding preservative of corpses as it kills the bacteria which cause putrifaction.