But these are not prisoners!
The members of the so called counterfeiting commando were supposed to be executed in the adits of the Ebensee concentration camp towards the end of the Second World War, since they were tasked with secret operations such as providing the Nazis with forged American dollars, British pounds and other documents. Yet the chaos prevailing towards the end of the war, as well as efforts of Austrian partisans thwarted the Nazi plan to transport prominent prisoners to the Ebensee concentration camp. On May 5, 1945, at 10:30 a.m., the Ebensee concentration camp was already controlled by the prisoners who were awaiting the arrival of American troops. The counterfeiting commando was thus handed over by the SS soldiers to the administration of the already liberated camp. Adolf Burger recalls how the camp administration was reluctant to accept the members of the counterfeiting commando: “The SS man who guarded us reported: ‘I am handing over 120 prisoners.’ But the commander of the liberated camp objected: ‘What? These are prisoners?’ Because we had hair, we looked healthy, and we wore shoes; no prisoners ever looked like us. So he told our guard: ‘But these are not prisoners. Who are these people?’ At that point we jumped up and ran to the armed prisoner who was guarding the camp and we showed him our sleeves: ‘Look, we have numbers, we are from Auschwitz, we were the special commando from Sachsenhausen, let us in.’ When the commander of the liberated camp saw that he ordered them to let us in. That was on May 5, at 10:30 a.m. And we ran so that he would not change his mind. We ran all the way to the end of the camp. So was my liberation, although the Americans were not there yet.”
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