The history of aphasia is gentle

Cassandre 2022-12-09 16:45:07

(Sorry to interrupt the topic first. Some people in the short comment criticized sleep indiscriminately. Thank you. Please be able to successfully stare at the screen for 9 hours before judging others. It is an option to separate a few days to see it, but it is by no means a complete collection of ideas. method, marathon screenings torture people, and this kind of torture is also a channel for the transmission of catastrophe.)

For 9 hours everyone was commenting on the massacre,

People who escape from the strip room at the critical point of death, people who are treated as knives to suck the blood of their own race, people who hang up false mercy, people who think they deserve what they deserve.

Everyone was able to speak, except for the absurd reasons of hair cutting/delice/disinfection, which were sent into the center of the poisonous gas, and the victims who were desperately hammered and shouted to no avail.

The truth of losing the person's words may only exist in imagination; but it seems that the evil of human beings cannot be speculated by future generations who are separated from the scene. corner.

The tragic situation in the world was planned by several Nazi executives. The "highest action" was issued layer by layer, and the small evils accumulated into a super murder method.

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Extended Reading

Shoah quotes

  • Claude Lanzmann: You don't remember those days?

    Franz Grassler: Not much. I recall more clearly my pre-war mountaineering trips than the entire war period and those days in Warsaw. All, in all, those were bad times. It's a fact we tend to forget, thank God, the bad times more easily than the good. The bad times are repressed.

  • Claude Lanzmann: But a ghetto like Warsaw's, in a great capital, in the heart of the city...

    Franz Grassler: That was unusual.

    Claude Lanzmann: You say you wanted to maintain the ghetto?

    Franz Grassler: Our mission wasn't to annihilate the ghetto, but to keep it alive, to maintain it.

    Claude Lanzmann: What does "alive" mean in such conditions?

    Franz Grassler: That was the problem. That was the whole problem.

    Claude Lanzmann: But people were dying in the streets. There were bodies everywhere?

    Franz Grassler: Exactly. That was the paradox.

    Claude Lanzmann: You see it as a paradox?

    Franz Grassler: I'm sure of it.

    Claude Lanzmann: Why? Can you explain?

    Franz Grassler: No.

    Claude Lanzmann: Why not?

    Franz Grassler: Explain what? But the fact is... That wasn't maintaining! Jews were being exterminated daily in the ghetto wrote... To maintain it properly we'd have needed more substantial rations and less crowding.

    Claude Lanzmann: Why weren't the rations more humane? Why weren't they? That was a German decision wasn't it?

    Franz Grassler: There was no real decision to starve the ghetto. The big decision to exterminate came much later.

    Claude Lanzmann: That's right, later. In 1942.

    Franz Grassler: Precisely.

    Claude Lanzmann: A year later.

    Franz Grassler: Just so. Our mission, as I recall it, was to manage the ghetto, and naturally with those inadequate rations and the over-crowding, a high, even excessive death rate was inevitable.

    Claude Lanzmann: Yes. What does "maintain" the ghetto mean in such conditions, the food, sanitation, etcetera? What could the Jews do against such measures?

    Franz Grassler: They couldn't do anything.

    Claude Lanzmann: Why did Czerniakow commit suicide?

    Franz Grassler: Because he realised there was no future for the ghetto. He probably saw before I did that the Jews would be killed.