European Resistance Archive/European Resistance Archive (ERA)
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One of them was an economist,
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his last name was very strange - by the way he was Armenian and not Russian - Jekatow, the husband of Muta Dziewicka,
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who offered me to work in the offices, in the economics office in PKWN.
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And just after a moment professor Syngalewicz came to me, he was the professor of forensic medicine
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and offered me to work with him in the Majdanek committee.
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I took this offer.
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We were travelling, watching and making notes, all things which were important enough we made notes about,
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for example a story like this – we are going through the field,
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there was supposed to be cabbage but were only dried stalks,
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the ground was creaking and giving way under our feet.
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Those were human bones,
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it was the rest from the crematorium,
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everything from there was emptied out there and dug up and then they planted cabbage there.
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Then we came closer to the crematorium.
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There were parts of bodies, some of them prepared to be taken to the chamber.
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People were put in a row, gunshot in the back of the neck", the bodies were brown.
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They did not look horrible, they were brown,
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the smell was disgusting, it was such a hot day, August, in the middle of August in 1944.
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We always had a scarf on our head to cover our hair and protect it from the smell,
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the smell which was in Majdanek. After coming back from Majdanek we put our clothes onto the balcony.
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Politique de confidentialité
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