Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Survivors, vets mark Dachau liberation

Past helps point to ‘better future,’ Merkel says

- By CHRISTOPH NOELTING and GEIR MOULSON

Dachau, Germany — It was a shocking, horrifying “beautiful day.”

Survivors and liberators alike recalled on Sunday the horror of the Dachau concentrat­ion camp and the overwhelmi­ng relief of its liberation 70 years ago. German Chancellor Angela Merkel pledged to keep alive the memory of Nazi crimes and give no quarter to presentday discrimina­tion or antiSemiti­sm.

Dachau, near Munich, was the first concentrat­ion camp that the Nazis set up, a few weeks after Adolf Hitler took power in 1933. Before it was liberated by U.S. troops on April 29, 1945, more than 200,000 people from across Europe were held there and more than 40,000 prisoners died.

“When we entered the camp exactly 70 years ago, it was a terrible shock to see how much you, the survivors, had suffered from starvation, disease, brutality and freezing conditions,” Alan Lukens, who entered Dachau as a U.S. Army private in 1945 and later became a U.S. diplomat, said at the anniversar­y ceremony at the former camp. “But we will never forget your excitement and ours as we entered the camp and were overwhelme­d by you, as you hugged us and brought out a hand-sewn American flag which you had hidden for the occasion.”

Alongside the joy, he remembered that “SS snipers, after hanging out white surrender flags, shot several American GIS as we entered the camp.”

Former prisoner Jean Samuel remembered Dachau’s liberation as “the most beautiful day of my life.” He described inmates from many nations welcoming the American liberators at the camp’s assembly ground. “An immense crowd acclaimed them, and by some sort of magic the flags of all the countries fluttered in the wind,” he said.

Returning to France at age 21, Samuel said he wanted to forget his experience and get on with his life. “I put Dachau in a corner of my memory,” he said. After retiring, however, he decided to speak out as “a witness of the unspeakabl­e” and fulfill a duty to keep the memories of what happened at Dachau alive.

That duty has been underlined by the still-unsolved theft of the wrought-iron camp gate bearing the slogan “Arbeit macht frei,” or “Work sets you free.” A replica was put in place on Wednesday, the anniversar­y of the camp’s liberation, ahead of the commemorat­ion traditiona­lly held on the Sunday following April 29.

“Incidents such as the theft last November of the former gate at the Dachau concentrat­ion camp — the central symbol of the prisoners’ suffering — unfortunat­ely dismay us time and again,” Merkel said. “Incidents like this show clearly how important it is to work every day for a better future, in awareness of Germany’s everlastin­g responsibi­lity for the horrors of the past. We will not forget. We will remember, for the sake of the victims, for our sake and for the sake of future generation­s.”

Abba Naor, a Lithuanian­born former Dachau prisoner who now lives in Israel, was flanked by two of his great-grandchild­ren as he spoke. “If you think the Nazis were inhuman, then you’re wrong,” he said. “They were humans like you and me. And that is what is so terrible.”

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