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287 Abortion, for survival 165 Adler, Alfred, Viennese Psychoanalyst 23 Alexanderplatz, a film by Rainer Werner Fassbinder, 211 Allies air raids, experiencing 174–175 American-British, 179 declare war with Germany, 32 Anti-Semitism a childhood disease, 19 in Czech cultures, 18 Appy, John-Gottfried, German psychoanalyst on the meaning of Auschwitz, 273 “Aryanize,” 42 Auschwitz arrival, 77–78 -Birkenau (meadow of birches) 78, 80, 184, 196, 274 -Buna, for prisoners of hard labor, 162­CampB-IIa,Quarantine camp, 123 to prevent unrest, 123 taken out of, 120 Camp B-IIb, Czech family camp, 80, 83,100, 123, 129, 171, 196 end of, 153–154, 158, 198, 264 entered, 78 Camp B-IIc, women’s camp, 117, 165, 166 Camp B-IIe, Gypsy family camp, 151, 157 Camp B-IIf, Central Hospital Camp, 152, 170, 175 and Dr. Goldstein, 198 and Gypsies, 158 crematorium end of my transport, 116–117 first described, 47 rebellion at, 163 smoking, 90 gas chamber, 47, 150–151, 157, 133–134, 143 first news of mass killing, 122­ – 123, 129 revolt at, 145 interned in, 77–172 parents arrive, 103 Red Cross visit, 110 sister arrives, 165 symbol of destructiveness, 273 Auschwitz Archives, 80 Austria border of, 17–18 émigrés, 25, 35 pogrom (Kristallnacht), 27 Austrian-Hungarian monarchy nostalgia for, 10 general index 288 Unfree Associations inTepliz, 8 Axis, 49 German defeat, 134 Bajkovsky, Walter, 20 in twin relationship, 261 Baltic States, absorption of, 39 Battle of Britain, 44 Beethoven Quartets, concert in Theresienstadt, 71 Belgium, invasion of, 41–42 Benes, Eduard, President of Czechoslovakia , 27 Benjamin, Carl, wed Hanna, 165 Benjamin, Dr., pediatrician in Gypsy Camp, 165 Berl, Dr. Fritz, 215, 240 contacts Czech political prisoners, 227–229, 234–238 directs me, 216 leaves for Prague, 240, 262 protects me, 219, 222, 227–229 Berlin aged women from, 66–67 Sachsenhausen, 178 train to, 173–177 Bettelheim, Bruno, suicide of, 267 Bion, Wilfred, English psychoanalyst , pairing as connection, 260 Birkenau, see Auschwitz Bloch, Dr. Gottfried, official German record of transfer to the Central Hospital, 152 Bloch, Walter, cousin, shot while fleeing, 35 Bodman, Dr. Franz von, SS doctor, 83 Bohemia, western part of Czechoslovakia , 8 Bolzano, city in northern Italy, 20 Bonaparte, Princess Marie, helped Freud emigrate to England, 21 Brauchle, Dr. Alfred, German psychiatrist , 13 British Foreign Office, reports from Auschwitz received, 130, 184 Brownshirts, see SA (Sturmabteilung) Buchenwald joining Czech prisoners, 229 march to, 225–227 Budweis, 17 California, medical license, 248–249 Camp B-IIa, see Auschwitz Camp B-IIb, see Auschwitz Camp B-IIc, see Auschwitz Camp B-IIe, see Auschwitz Camp B-IIf, see Auschwitz Canada, Dr. Bernie Pollak, 277 Cåpek, Karel, Czech writer, 271 Central Hospital Camp, see Auschwitz Chamberlain, Neville, British Prime Minister, 20 annexation of Sudet, 23 refuses alliance against Hitler, 39 Charité University Hospital, Berlin, 175 Charles University, 16, 25, 40 Churchill, Winston, 44, 198 Civilization and Its Discontents (Freud), 271 “concert hall,” euphemisn for concentration camp, 38 crematorium, see Auschwitz Crohn, Dr. Fritz, 169, 174–175, 179, 184, 194 [3.139.72.14] Project MUSE (2024-04-26 03:54 GMT) 289 and bread, 180–183 and twinship, 261 Czech Budweiser beer, 17 Czech family camp, see Auschwitz Czech Jews, and German Jews, 19, 28, 42 Czech University, 16, 25, 40, 106 graduated from, 244 Czechoslovakia (Czechoslovakian Republic), 10, 20, 30, 42, 85 newly created, 7 end of, 23 old Independence day, 170 sacrifice of, 271 Sudetenland, 16 Czechoslovakian government in exile, 27 Czechoslovakian Republic, see Czechoslovakia Day of Atonement (Yom Kippur) Nazi response, 89 what I witnessed, 123 defenestration, 279 Die Schrift (The Script), a prominent journal of graphology, 26 Dolezal, Prof. of Psychology, Prague, 25 Dollfuss, Austrian Chancellor, 17 Dosužkov, Dr. Bohodar, guardian of Czech psychoanalysis, 277 presentations with, 278 and Soviets, 280 Dresden, visit to, 8 Drumlig, Prof. Emil, 238 “east,” a destination without further specification, 48 Edelstein, Jacob an important leader in the Prague Jewish community , 141 death of, 142 The Ego and the Id (Freud), 278 Ehrenburg, Ilya, Russian writer of manifesto “Woe Germany,” 212, 230 Eisenhower, General Dwight, first visit to a camp at war’s end, 198 Eisenstein, Sam, writer, 272 Eisner, Paul, writer, 59 “Elder of the camp” (lager-älteste), 81, 148 England attack on, 44 and Nazi weapons, 176 English Jews, 162 Epstein, Dr. Bertold, pediatrician in Gypsy Camp, 109, 157 after the war, 277 Eric, a young medic, 90, 116–117, 118, 119 Ernst, a KAPO, 207–208, 209, 212–214...

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