European Resistance Archive/European Resistance Archive (ERA)
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We always thought we knew everything, and we told them it would only last one or two more months,
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but they replied it would go on for another two years. They were right, the war went on for two more years.
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There were women who had to work on the railroad with shovels and pickaxes.
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Sometimes they were even pregnant, and trust me, that’s hard work.
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They didn’t do a headcount at night,
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to see who was back and who wasn’t, they didn’t care if ten of us had died during the day.
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Similarly, they did not expect us to work too hard, but we had to be at work every day.
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In my camp, after we woke up at five,
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we were supposed to get up and leave with the others,
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but after that there was no control on what we did during the day.
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And in any case, there was nowhere we could go.
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You were simply expected to be at work, even if you didn’t do anything all day.
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It was very cold where we were.
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There were Russian women, as well as some men.
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The harsh life of the camp
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All they gave us to eat was one of those tall loaves of dark bread.
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It was a large loaf, but you had to split it in five pieces.
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That’s all you got until evening. Then at night we were given some slop, but no more bread.
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That piece of bread was like gold for me: I used to eat it bit by bit, in order to savor it.
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We were terribly hungry and in the winter, when we went to work in Hagen, it was freezing:
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