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Now we decided, at four o'clock we start to make an uprising in
this way: in each group what worked, like we, for example, with
separating the clothes, we had two, three Germans what were [in]
supervision over us. They supervised us with the...And each group
what worked in different ways had two or three Germans what they
were there uh...uh to to watch them, how they work. So we decided
in...in each group to assign two people and these people with some
pretext, they will have to get them to a warehouse or somewhere and
quietly kill them with a knife or an axe or whatever and just do it
like nothing happened and in, in the meantime also to cut the
wires. And as I said, as I said before we tried to gear to do it in
the time when [SS Sergeant Gustav] Wagner was on vacation, so that
was really not safe, but safer. And that was...and so as I say, we
was assigned people in each group to...to do this kind of work. Now
there were in the barracks where we lived, there was a goldsmith,
a tailor, a shoemaker, and that they made for them clothes,
shoes...these people there. So that meant they had to come to fit.
So they told them, "In this day I will have the fit for you. Come
then, and I will have the fit for you, your shoes or your clothes."
And when they came there they were already people with this axe or
knives. They were hiding behind a a curtain or something, and they
killed them on the spot. When they came in to fit, they overwhelmed
them and they killed them, and shoved them in under the, under
somewhere that nobody sees, and, and the work went through like
nothing happened.
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