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America's Witnesses to the Holocaust
Bantam
March 2010
On Sale: March 16, 2010
336 pages ISBN: 0553807560 EAN: 9780553807561 Hardcover
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Non-Fiction
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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