Country Life

The boy who drew Auschwitz

After being liberated from a Nazi death camp, a Jewish boy sketched more than 80 profoundly moving drawings detailing his incarcerat­ion. Charlie Inglefield explains how he came to co-author a book of Thomas Geve’s powerful words and pictures

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Aged 15, Thomas Geve began to draw his experience­s of concentrat­ion camps. Charlie Inglefield relates his emotive tale

If we told people what we went through, they would not believe us. So, I decided to draw

TODAY, Zug—the small, Swiss lakeside town where I live—is home to some of the world’s largest companies, but, in 1945, it was a humble farming community renowned for its cherry production. That summer, the Felsenegg children’s home poised on top of the Zugerberg, a mountain overlookin­g the town, opened its doors to 107 exhausted and bewildered boys and girls, who had arrived from the horrors of Buchenwald concentrat­ion camp in Weimar, Germany. A 15year-old Jewish boy called Thomas Geve (his pseudonym) was among them.

I came across Thomas’s story by chance, thanks to a client of mine, Natalie Albrecht, who told me about an exhibition at Zug’s Burg Museum and gave me a leaflet entitled The Children of Buchenwald. I’ve always been interested in Second World War history and was intrigued by Switzerlan­d’s role. The leaflet explained how the Swiss alpine scenery allowed the children a chance to start their recovery and why for many, such as Thomas—who was mentioned by name— drawing and writing about their experience­s was a great help, too.

After researchin­g a little further, I found Thomas’s powerful drawings of his time in no fewer than three Nazi concentrat­ion camps and, after contacting his daughter, Yifat, arranged to meet him in Israel in July 2019. A ‘German’ Jew, Thomas and his mother were forced to move from Beuthen to Berlin as Hitler’s brutal persecutio­n gathered pace in 1939 and 1940. A streetwise child, Thomas was never interested in school or teachers, instead believing in what he could see in front of him and the wonders of technology —not least because, at that time, Berlin was glistening with Nazi invention and industrial progressio­n. In the years to come, those beliefs were to save his life.

Evading the SS, the Gestapo and the many informers on Berlin’s streets, Thomas and his mother survived for more than two years before handing themselves in, in June 1943. With no money and barely any food, they had little choice. At the time, rumours were circulatin­g that Germany’s Jewry could settle in the east and earn money by working hard.

Sent on transport 39—one of the last to leave Berlin—they arrived at Auschwitz-birkenau on June 29, 1943. Their hopes of a better existence were crushed as they stepped out of the wagons and on to the platform. Nearly two years later, at the age of 15—having survived Auschwitz-birkenau (where he was separated from his mother, who, tragically, did not), Gross-rosen and Buchenwald— Thomas was liberated on April 11, 1945.

In the days following his release, Thomas obtained some discarded SS ration cards and colour pencils, then proceeded to sketch more than 80 drawings, which, over the past 76 years, have become an important record of life in concentrat­ion camps. ‘If we told people what we went through, they would not believe us. So, I decided to draw my experience­s of life in the camps,’ he explained.

I have been so fortunate to work with Thomas to co-author his updated testimony in a new book, The Boy Who Drew Auschwitz, which follows his first two books, Youth in Chains and Guns & Barbed Wire, published in 1958 and 1987 respective­ly. Our aim with this latest edition was to make Thomas’s story more digestible and easier to navigate for today’s readers.

As a first-time author writing about such a sensitive subject, it was a huge challenge

to take on, not least because the Covid-19 pandemic robbed us of the opportunit­y to continue to work together in person. Neverthele­ss, Yifat did an amazing job of liaising between us and helping us to communicat­e.

Looking back, I was so lucky to have had that initial week with Thomas in Israel, back in 2019. Understand­ably, he isn’t a man of many words, but what he did reveal was moving and insightful. I particular­ly remember sharing a taxi to Jerusalem, en route to a talk he was giving at the Yad Vashem Museum, when we spoke about his childhood in Berlin and I asked how he felt he had been able to survive the concentrat­ion camps. ‘I didn’t like textbooks or school. I was a boy of the streets—i wanted to explore. I did not spend my time reading in the synagogues like a lot of Jewish children,’ he replied. ‘I concentrat­ed on doing what I was told and putting one foot in front of the other.’

I concentrat­ed on doing what I was told and putting one foot in front of the other

Throughout our interviews, it became clear that, even as a child, Thomas possessed great maturity and strength of character— he was tall for his age, able to make people laugh, remember songs and quickly pick up snippets of different languages. These characteri­stics would prove to be the difference between living or dying, enabling him to scrounge an additional bowl of soup or a mouldy piece of bread. In this book, Thomas does not ignore the horror of the Holocaust; however, he prefers to concentrat­e on positivity, hope and survival—how his friends and fellow inmates lived and survived the camps.

Now 91, Thomas’s attention to detail—as befitting his career as an engineer—is as sharp as ever, with a clear recollecti­on of his childhood honed by years of giving testimonie­s in Israel and around Europe. He has always stuck to the precise details of what he saw and went through and I felt privileged to have spent time with Thomas and to have the chance to help him retell his story.

I came back to Switzerlan­d determined to fulfil his wish of reaching future generation­s and set about writing a book proposal. Happily, Harpercoll­ins believed in the story straightaw­ay, although it took me a while to adapt to my role as a co-author, interviewe­r, listener, student and editor. I made mistakes, but kept learning. At first, I found Thomas’s descriptio­ns difficult to understand, but realised that his original language should not be altered unless absolutely necessary. We can never fully comprehend what he endured and, therefore, changing his words would detract from what he felt and experience­d.

Thomas’s aim has never changed during the past 76 years—he’s always wanted to share exactly what he saw in those Nazi concentrat­ion camps. By documentin­g his story, we can all learn about this horrific period of world history and ensure it never happens again. It is very rare to be able to bring the words and drawings of a living Holocaust survivor together in this way. If a picture is worth 1,000 words, Thomas has achieved that and so much more. ‘The Boy Who Drew Auschwitz: A Powerful True Story of Hope and Survival’, by Thomas Geve and Charlie Inglefield, is out now (Harpercoll­ins, £18.99)

 ??  ?? Free at last: the 15-year-old Thomas Geve recovering in Zug, Switzerlan­d, after being liberated from Buchenwald on April 11, 1945
Free at last: the 15-year-old Thomas Geve recovering in Zug, Switzerlan­d, after being liberated from Buchenwald on April 11, 1945
 ??  ?? Birkenau Concentrat­ion Camp, drawn by Thomas after his release
Birkenau Concentrat­ion Camp, drawn by Thomas after his release
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Through drawings such as
On the Ramp, Thomas revealed the truth of these camps to the world
Through drawings such as On the Ramp, Thomas revealed the truth of these camps to the world
 ??  ?? Words are not enough: Disinfecti­on
Words are not enough: Disinfecti­on

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