Summary: (21-30)
At Birkenau,
the first of many “selections” occurs, during which individuals presumed weaker
or less useful are weeded out to be killed. Eliezer and his father remain
together, separated from Eliezer’s mother and younger sister, whom he never
sees again. Eliezer and his father meet a prisoner, who counsels them to lie
about their ages. Eliezer, not yet fifteen, is to say that he is eighteen,
while his father, who is fifty, is to say that he is forty. Another prisoner
accosts the new arrivals, angrily asking them why they peacefully let the Nazis
bring them to Auschwitz. He explains to them, finally, why they have been
brought to Auschwitz: to be killed and burned. Hearing this, some among the
younger Jews begin to consider rebelling, but the older Jews advise them to
rely not on rebellion but on faith, and they proceed docilely to the selection.
In a central square, Dr. Mengele stands, determining whether new arrivals are
fit to work or whether they are to be killed immediately. Taking the prisoner’s
advice, Eliezer lies about his age, telling Mengele he is eighteen. He also
says that he is a farmer rather than a student, and is motioned to Mengele’s
left, along with his father. Despite Eliezer’s joy at remaining with his
father, uncertainty remains. Nobody knows whether left means the crematorium or
the prison. As the prisoners move through Birkenau, they are horrified to see a
huge pit where babies are being burned, and another for adults. Eliezer cannot
believe his eyes, and tells his father that what they see is impossible, that
“humanity would never tolerate” such an atrocity. His father, breaking down
into tears, replies that humanity is nonexistent in the world of the
crematoria. Everybody in the column of prisoners weeps, and somebody begins to
recite the Jewish prayer for the dead, the Kaddish. Eliezer’s father
also recites the prayer. Eliezer, however, is skeptical. He cannot understand
what he has to thank God for. When Eliezer and his father are two steps from
the edge of the pit, their rank is diverted and directed to a barracks. Eliezer
interrupts his narration with a moving reflection on the impact of that night
on his life, a night that forever burned Nazi atrocity into his memory. In the
barracks, the Jews are stripped and shaved, disinfected with gasoline,
showered, and clothed in prison uniforms. They are lectured by a Nazi officer
and told that they have two options: hard work or the crematorium. When
Eliezer’s father asks for the bathroom, he is beaten by the Kapo (a head prisoner,
in charge of the other inmates). Eliezer is appalled at his own failure to
defend his father. Soon they make the short march from Birkenau to Auschwitz,
where they are quartered for three weeks, and where their prison numbers are
tattooed on their arms. Eliezer and his father meet a distant relative from
Antwerp, a man named Stein, who inquires after news of his family. Eliezer lies
and tells him that he has heard about Stein’s family, and that they are alive
and well. When a transport from Antwerp arrives, however, the man learns the
truth, and he never visits Eliezer again. Despite all that they have seen, the
prisoners continue to express their faith in God and trust in divine
redemption. Finally, they are escorted on a four-hour walk from Auschwitz to
Buna, the work camp in which they will be interned for months.
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