60th anniversary of concentration camp’s fall remembered

Survivors, officials gather to observe liberation day

? Elderly survivors of the Buchenwald concentration camp laid flowers Sunday and observed a moment of silence for victims of the Nazis, 60 years after U.S. troops liberated the camp.

Flags from some 30 nations hung in a cold drizzle to symbolize the nations from which the camp’s 240,000 prisoners came between 1937 and 1945. About 56,000 died — worked to death, shot or killed in medical experiments.

German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder and U.S. veterans came to the camp memorial outside Weimar for the commemoration, which kindled vivid memories for the survivors, most of them in their 70s and 80s.

Georg Sterner, a Hungarian Jew, recalled looking out from Barracks No. 37 when the first U.S. tank crashed through the barbed-wire perimeter fence on the morning of April 11, 1945.

“We were hanging out of the windows,” said Sterner, who was 17 then. “It came slowly, slowly. It stopped between the trees. It revved the engine … made a lunge, and broke through.”

Inside, shocked soldiers from the U.S 3rd Army found some 21,000 starving survivors and piles of corpses, some only partially burned in the crematorium ovens as the Nazi SS and their helpers fled the camp.

“It was so incredible — stacks of bodies, the smell, the total shock and confusion, people walking around by the thousands,” said Jerry Hontas, who arrived the next day as a 21-year-old Army medic.

“We were so shocked we couldn’t talk to each other for days,” said Hontas, of Boca Raton, Fla. “We had no concept of this kind of insane cruelty.”

On Sunday, some survivors came in wheelchairs. Others wore replicas of their striped inmate’s uniforms and their old prisoner numbers.

Ukrainian concentration camp survivor Petro Mischtschuk, 78, kneels Sunday with a flag and a red rose in his hand in front of the entrance at the former Nazi concentration camp Buchenwald.

Schroeder recalled that Weimar stands for Germany’s classical cultural heritage — Johann Wolfgang Goethe, the most revered German author and playwright, had his home there — and said the Nazis had turned it into “coldness and cruelty.”

“I bow before you, the victims and their families,” he said at Weimar National Theater, addressing Buchenwald survivors in the audience.

Unlike Auschwitz, Buchenwald was not expressly built for mass killing, but the camp was just as much part of the Nazis’ effort to wipe out anyone deemed un-German.

Sunday’s ceremony was meant as a remembrance of victims of Nazi camps in Germany, which were successively freed as Allied troops advanced before the Nazi surrender in World War II in May 1945.

Thuringia, the state where Weimar is located, was a Nazi Party bastion even before Adolf Hitler came to power in 1933 and he often visited the city.

Inmates of Buchenwald, near Weimar, Germany, march to receive treatment after the camp is liberated in April 1945.

With an eye on recent electoral successes by Germany’s extreme-right fringe, Schroeder said Germany must remain vigilant against racism and anti-Semitism.

“We remember what happened, and we remind others of it, because we must not forget,” Thuringia governor Dieter Althaus said at the theater. “Because if we forget, we risk that it will repeat itself.”

Buchenwald was part of the Nazi Holocaust in which 6 million European Jews died. But there also were non-Jewish victims — political prisoners from Germany and other European countries, Soviet prisoners of war and Jehovah’s Witnesses among many others.

After the war, the site came under Soviet control. The Soviets imprisoned suspected Nazis and others under appalling conditions that claimed some 7,000 lives — a fact Schroeder noted on Sunday.