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- WORLD WAR II, Page 46REMEMBRANCE
-
-
- Watching the Newsreels
- By LENI RIEFENSTAHL
-
- Riefenstahl, 87, who served the Nazi cause by filming such
- propaganda masterpieces as Triumph of the Will, attended one of
- Hitler's regular movie nights at his Berchtesgaden retreat in late
- August 1939.
-
- Before the main feature, as usual, the weekly newsreel was
- shown. The camera showed Moscow. A troop parade on Red Square.
- Stalin appeared in close-up. I watched Hitler intently looking at
- Stalin's face. Hitler interrupted, asking the projectionist to
- repeat the sequence two or three times. Visibly excited, he
- commented, "I rather like the way this man looks. I believe one
- could come to terms with him." Then he rose and retired to his
- room.
-
-
- "Little Boxes of Ashes"
- By SIMONE VEIL
-
- President of the European Parliament from 1979 to 1982, Veil,
- now 62, was shipped to Auschwitz in 1944, where most of her family
- perished.
-
- I was scared all the time. I was always aware that, after all,
- we could lose this war. As Jews, we felt more threatened. With the
- Anschluss, girls at our school who were refugees told of
- humiliation, of Jews being forced to scrub the sidewalks with
- toothbrushes in Vienna. When some told of receiving little boxes
- of ashes from Dachau, we had great difficulty believing that people
- were actually being killed. Nobody imagined that there could be a
- plan for extermination.
-
-
- "I Thought the Heavens Had Fallen"
- By WOJCIECH JARUZELSKI
-
- Poland's President, now 66, fled with his family to Lithuania
- and then Siberia three weeks after the Nazi invasion.
-
- I still remember that sunny September day, the whizzing sound
- of German planes strafing defenseless refugees, exploding bombs,
- the stench of burning and dead horses at the roadside. I thought
- the heavens had fallen in on me. Relations between Lithuania and
- Poland were not very good, and we were held up at the border,
- adding to our sense of alarm and fear. We were convinced that we
- would return home soon, that a British-French offensive would
- enable the Polish army to go on fighting against the overwhelming
- forces of the enemy. Not for a moment did I think I would not
- return to Poland for more than four years.
-
-
- "Waiting for Death"
- By RYSZARD KAPUSCINSKI
-
- The Polish journalist and author (The Emperor and Shah of
- Shahs) was seven when he and his family fled the Nazis.
-
- I remember walking with my sister next to a horse-drawn cart.
- High up on the hay my grandfather was lying on a linen sheet. He
- was paralyzed. When the air raid started, the whole patiently
- marching crowd was suddenly filled with panic. People sought safety
- in ditches, in bushes, in the potato fields. On the now empty road
- there was only the cart on which my grandfather was lying. He could
- see the planes coming at him, how suddenly they dived down. When
- the planes disappeared, we returned to the cart and my mother wiped
- the sweat off Grandfather's face. After each raid sweat rolled down
- Grandfather's tired, emaciated face.
-
- We encountered the corpses of horses everywhere. Poor horses,
- big defenseless animals that don't know how to hide. They stand
- motionless, waiting for death. It was always the corpses of horses
- -- black, bay, pied, chestnut -- lying upside down with the legs
- pointing into the air, their hooves admonishing the world. It was
- as if it were a war not between people but between horses, as if
- they were the only victims of the strife.
-
-
- "We Could Do Nothing"
- By RAFAEL LOC
-
- Now 79, Loc (pronounced lotz) was a Polish lieutenant when the
- invasion began.
-
- The stillness was shattered by the howling and screeching and
- booming of German bombers and artillery. The Messerschmitts came
- at us in waves. We could do nothing. We had no antiaircraft guns.
- We had nothing to return fire at their long-range artillery. Two
- hours after it began we were panic stricken, and our entire
- battalion jumped out of the trenches and ran toward our regimental
- headquarters.
-
- Only half the battalion made it. We continued running and
- walking, but wherever we turned we met German artillery and tank
- fire. They were in back of us and in front of us. To the right was
- automatic fire; to the left we were shot at by artillery. One shell
- hit a mine 300 yards from us and set off a long line of Polish-laid
- mines; they exploded in domino fashion. We ran, we lay on the
- ground, we ran. We didn't know which way to go.
-
- Captured after four days, Loc later became Poland's first
- Consul-General in Israel. Back in Warsaw, he was fired from the
- Ministry of Foreign Affairs during a wave of anti-Semitism in 1953
- and immigrated to Israel in 1956.
-
-
- "There Was No Enthusiasm for War"
- By RICHARD VON WEIZSACKER
-
- Now President of West Germany, he was a 19-year-old private
- with the Ninth Infantry Regiment in Potsdam when war came. In 1949,
- Von Weizsacker's father was convicted of war crimes at Nuremberg
- and sentenced to seven years in jail; his sentence was commuted in
- 1951.
-
- We knew nothing of the secret protocol between Hitler and
- Stalin that contained provisions for the attack on Poland. German
- newspapers were full of reports of Polish violence and provocations
- against the German minority. Who knew whether the reports were
- correct? Most were believed.
-
- Despite the influence of Hitler's propaganda on German public
- opinion, there was no enthusiasm for war. Thus the mobilization of
- the Wehrmacht was conducted as quietly as possible. About Aug. 25,
- after being hospitalized with appendicitis, I received orders to
- rejoin my unit at Potsdam immediately. I was told not to talk about
- it.
-
- That very same day, I later discovered, my father -- a state
- secretary in the Foreign Ministry -- had taken part in a last-ditch
- attempt to dissuade Hitler from issuing the invasion order. In his
- notes my father remarked, "This afternoon is the most depressing
- of my life. Apart from the unforeseeable consequences for the
- existence of Germany and of my family, it is appalling that my name
- should be connected with this event."
-
- Two or three days before Sept. 1, our battalion departed --
- but not, as in August 1914, with brass bands and in broad daylight.
- We set off in pitch darkness, taking side streets to the
- freightyards. Early on the morning of Sept. 1, we crossed into
- Poland. We soon saw action. Just a few hundred yards from me, my
- older brother Heinrich fell. We barely had time to bury him and the
- other dead before we had to hurry on. The suffering had begun.
-
- We were no better and no worse than our fathers, who 25 years
- earlier had been drawn into the First World War. And we were no
- better or worse than our children, who today pass judgment upon
- us. We, like the soldiers of other countries, were trained to
- obedience. We had not been brought up free to demonstrate our
- opposition under the protection of a liberal constitution. We had
- the same sensitivities that all humans have, but during a time of
- difficult decisions, we lacked political vision.