漏 2025 91福利

1375 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio 44115
(216) 916-6100 | (877) 399-3307

WKSU is a public media service licensed to and operated by 91福利.
srcset=https://npr.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/8092df9/2147483647/strip/true/crop/2880x210+0+0/resize/2880x210!/quality/90/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fnpr-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fbb%2Ffb%2F1f301c58444e92773b55525d4569%2Fipm-pinwheel-pattern.png
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

'My moment of liberation': Holocaust survivor reflects on 80 years since emancipation at Dachau

The
/
The Dachau concentration camp memorial site where more than 43,000 people were murdered and over 200,000 were imprisoned during the Nazi terror reign from 1933-1945 in Dachau, Germany, Thursday, April 24, 2025, a few days before the 80th anniversary of the liberation of the camp. (Matthias Schrader/AP)

May 8 marks the 80-year anniversary of the end of World War II in Europe. But even before the war officially ended, Allied troops liberated Nazi concentration camps across German-occupied areas.

Eighty years ago Tuesday, the liberation of the Dachau concentration camp began. When American troops arrived at Dachau, they found nearly 70,000 prisoners.

鈥淟arge numbers were simply abandoned and left to die,鈥 said Dan Stone, the director of the Holocaust Research Institute at Royal Holloway. 鈥淭hey were largely Jews who鈥檇 been evacuated there from other camps further east.鈥

, who grew up in Lithuania, was one of those prisoners. In 1941, Gotz was 13. He remembers the German Army arriving and immediately attacking Jews. His family was rounded up with the rest of the Jewish population of Kaunas, Lithuania.

鈥淭he Germans took over and put us in a ghetto,鈥 Gotz said. 鈥淭hirty thousand Jews were jammed in a ghetto. Very crowded conditions. A tough life.鈥

After three years there, Gotz, his father and three uncles were sent to Dachau.

鈥淲e were put to work 12-hour shifts, construction work. We slept on hard boards,鈥 Gotz said. 鈥淲e got nothing to eat, and we had no washing facilities. I didn鈥檛 have a shower for 10 months. We were full of lice. The lice were drinking our blood and brought us disease.鈥

Gotz worked as a mechanic building an underground factory that would be used to manufacture fighter jets. But the factory was never finished.

鈥淲e started to die after a few months, even young people started to die,鈥 Gotz said. 鈥淚 had to carry the first dead body. It was very difficult, but then I got used to it. I carried more dead bodies than I could count.鈥

Gotz said that when the American Army arrived at Dachau, they put all the prisoners on a train to the central part of the camp.

鈥淢y father was very close to death. He was dying. I begged my father not to die,鈥 Gotz said. 鈥淢y father weighed 65 pounds. And he said to me, 鈥楨lly, I don鈥檛 know how much longer I will be with you, my son.鈥 I was sure he was going to die that night.鈥

The next morning, however, Gotz鈥檚 father was still alive. Gotz went to get soup and bread for himself and his father. Then, he saw an American Jeep pull up outside.

鈥淚 said, 鈥楩ather, we made it. They promised to kill us before the war is over. We are alive and the Americans are here,鈥欌 Gotz said. 鈥淎nd my father said, 鈥極h, that鈥檚 good. Have you got the bread?鈥 I was still holding this piece of bread. It was my moment of liberation.鈥

While he acknowledges the power of emancipation at concentration camps, Stone of the Holocaust Research Institute said the word 鈥榣iberation鈥 doesn鈥檛 tell the full story.

Often, he said, history focuses on the concentration camps and overlooks local massacres of Jewish people across Europe during the war. In 1941, a police officer in Belarus wrote to his wife about shooting truckloads of Jews. In Lithuania, a man beat 50 Jewish people to death in front of a crowd.

鈥淟arge numbers of Jews were killed by collaborationist regimes,鈥 Stone said, 鈥渙r in the case of Romania, which is the best example, an independent sovereign country that was allied to Nazi Germany.鈥

Stone says that since the end of World War II, there has been a push to put all the blame on Germany and erase the history of violence against Jewish people in other countries.

鈥淥nce the commissions of inquiry that took place in the post-Cold War context in the countries of Eastern Europe published their findings, a lot of local nationalists objected and said, 鈥榃e shouldn鈥檛 be airing our dirty laundry in public,鈥欌 Stone said. 鈥淲e still see a great deal of tension over simply accepting the historical facts.鈥

Plus, concentration camp survivors live with complex trauma after their liberation. Gotz says that when he got out of Dachau, he hated the Germans for what he鈥檇 endured.

鈥淚 was full of hate, and I was looking for a gun to kill them. And after a while, I gave up the idea because I said to myself, 鈥榃hat are you thinking? You can鈥檛 kill people in peacetime. Give it up. Stop hating. Think about yourself. What are you going to do? You are 17 years old and your life is in front of you,鈥欌 Gotz said. 鈥淲hen I stopped hating, I started living for the first time.鈥

____

produced and edited this interview for broadcast with . adapted it for the web.

This article was originally published on

Copyright 2025 WBUR

Grace Griffin
Robin Young is the award-winning host of Here & Now. Under her leadership, Here & Now has established itself as public radio's indispensable midday news magazine: hard-hitting, up-to-the-moment and always culturally relevant.
Thomas Danielian