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Home > Holocaust > The Liberators: America's Witnesses to the Holocaust by Michael Hirsh (hardcover)
The Liberators: America's Witnesses to the Holocaust by Michael Hirsh (hardcover)
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At last, the everyday fighting men who were the first Americans to
know the full and horrifying truth about the Holocaust share their
astonishing stories. Rich with powerful never-before-published details
from the author’s interviews with more than 150 U.S. soldiers who
liberated the Nazi death camps, The Liberators is an essential addition
to the literature of World War II—and a stirring testament to Allied
courage in the face of inconceivable atrocities.
Taking us from
the beginnings of the liberators’ final march across Germany to V-E Day
and beyond, Michael Hirsh allows us to walk in their footsteps,
experiencing the journey as they themselves experienced it. But this
book is more than just an in-depth account of the liberation. It reveals
how profoundly these young men were affected by what they saw—the
unbelievable horror and pathos they felt upon seeing “stacks of bodies
like cordwood” and “skeletonlike survivors” in camp after camp. That
life-altering experience has stayed with them to this very day. It’s
been well over half a century since the end of World War II, and they
still haven’t forgotten what the camps looked like, how they smelled,
what the inmates looked like, and how it made them feel. Many of the
liberators suffer from what’s now called post-traumatic stress disorder
and still experience Holocaust-related nightmares.
Here we meet
the brave souls who—now in their eighties and nineties—have chosen at
last to share their stories. Corporal Forrest Robinson saw masses of
dead bodies at Nordhausen and was so horrified that he lost his memory
for the next two weeks. Melvin Waters,a 4-F volunteer civilian ambulance
driver, recalls that a woman at Bergen-Belsen “fought us like a cat
because she thought we were taking her to the crematory.” Private Don
Timmer used his high school German to interpret for General Dwight
Eisenhower during the supreme Allied commander’s visit to Ohrdruf, the
first camp liberated by the Americans. And Phyllis Lamont Law, an army
nurse at Mauthausen-Gusen, recalls the shock and, ultimately, “the hope”
that “you can save a few.”
From Bergen-Belsen in northern
Germany to Mauthausen in Austria, The Liberators offers readers
an intense and unforgettable look at the Nazi death machine through the
eyes of the men and women who were our country’s witnesses to the
Holocaust. The liberators’ recollections are historically important,
vivid, riveting, heartbreaking, and, on rare occasions, joyous and
uplifting. This book is their opportunity, perhaps for the last time, to
tell the world.
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