Cold Crematorium: Reporting From The Land Of Auschwitz
The first English language edition of a lost memoir by a Holocaust survivor, offering a shocking and deeply moving perspective on life within the camps.
JĆ³zsef Debreczeni, a prolific Hungarian-language journalist and poet, arrived in Auschwitz in 1944; had he been selected to go āleft,ā his life expectancy would have been approximately forty-five minutes. One of the āluckyā ones, he was sent to the āright,ā which led to twelve horrifying months of incarceration and slave labor in a series of camps, ending in the āCold Crematoriumāāthe so-called hospital of the forced labor camp Dƶrnhau, where prisoners too weak to work awaited execution. But as Soviet and Allied troops closed in on the camps, local Nazi commandersāanxious about the possible consequences of outright murderādecided to leave the remaining prisoners to die in droves rather than sending them directly to the gas chambers.
Debreczeni recorded his experiences in Cold Crematorium, one of the harshest, most merciless indictments of Nazism ever written. This haunting memoir, rendered in the precise and unsentimental style of an accomplished journalist, is an eyewitness account of incomparable literary quality. The subject matter is intrinsically tragic, yet the authorās evocative prose, sometimes using irony, sarcasm, and even acerbic humor, compels the reader to imagine human beings in circumstances impossible to comprehend intellectually.