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Dachau — Oral History

Edward Weiss
Born: USA

Describes Dachau shortly after liberation [Interview: 2004]

Transcript:

I ended up the war just outside, in the vicinity of Dachau, and when the war ended on or about the 5th of May, I was with a small group that went to Dachau concentration camp to establish liaison with the German Wehrmacht hospital unit that had replaced the American hospital unit a couple of weeks before. One of my duties was to collect and dispose of the dead each morning from the barracks and from the hospital itself. And this was all carefully recorded by the German clerical staff. One morning when I came in to pick up the report, the clerk, one of the clerks told me that the report was ready but the colonel hadn't signed it, and so I'd have to wait a few minutes until the colonel arrived. And I went to the back of the room and sat on one of the desks, yakking with other German clerks when the colonel finally did come in, and one of the clerks jumped up, "Achtung," and the colonel responded "Heil Hitler." Then he saw this OD uniform at the back of the room and for the first time invited me into his private office where he explained about conditional reflexes to me and said that he had been responding in that fashion for 15 years and it was a conditioned reflex.

I ended up the war just outside, in the vicinity of Dachau, and when the war ended on or about the 5th of May, I was with a small group that went to Dachau concentration camp to establish liaison with the German Wehrmacht hospital unit that had replaced the American hospital unit a couple of weeks before. One of my duties was to collect and dispose of the dead each morning from the barracks and from the hospital itself. And this was all carefully recorded by the German clerical staff. One morning when I came in to pick up the report, the clerk, one of the clerks told me that the report was ready but the colonel hadn't signed it, and so I'd have to wait a few minutes until the colonel arrived. And I went to the back of the room and sat on one of the desks, yakking with other German clerks when the colonel finally did come in, and one of the clerks jumped up, "Achtung," and the colonel responded "Heil Hitler." Then he saw this OD uniform at the back of the room and for the first time invited me into his private office where he explained about conditional reflexes to me and said that he had been responding in that fashion for 15 years and it was a conditioned reflex.

GI Edward S. Weiss, a resident of Gaithersburg, Maryland, was at the Dachau concentration camp shortly after its liberation.

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