Krzystkowice (earlier Christianstadt)
A subsidiary of the Gross-Rosen concentration camp · Krzystkowice, Poland
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It wasn’t human but more human than elsewhere

Available in: English | Česky

Anna Hyndráková was transferred to Christianstadt from the women’s camp in Auschwitz in July 1944. “For three days, no-one had given us anything to eat. We worked a lot there and the work was tough, but all in all we considered it quite a good camp. Also SS-women guarding us didn’t have the same example of cruelties as those in Auschwitz... They were stupid, uneducated, mean, but they weren’t as sadistic as the others. Once, a woman gave birth to a dead child there and they were forcing her to go to work the next day. We had a German foreman, a Communist from Potsdam. We had told him that this woman gave birth yesterday and he made her a place to lie on in a tool shed, and she could then sleep there and rest.” In Christianstadt everyone had to get up at three a.m., work started at six a.m. Before going to work and after returning from it, counting took place in the Apel Platz. “After returning from the camp we had to stand at the Apel for the idiots to count us, because it was an insurmountable problem for them. I can’t say the conditions were human, but they were more human than anywhere else. There wasn’t the ‘example’ of wiping out. Although, when somebody had given birth... the women wrapped the newborn in newspaper and on a bicycle took it to the forest to dig it into the ground. They weren’t gentle souls at all. But if a person didn’t die there, then he or she survived.”

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Anna Hyndráková

Anna Hyndráková

Ann Hyndráková was born in 1928 into a Jewish family. She spent her early childhood in the same way as thousands of other Czech children and according to her words, the Czech identity was equally important as the Jewish identity for her family. In 1938 came Munich and with it the anxiety of what would follow. At the same time, however, there was faith that the present situation will be short-lived. The year 1939 brought the invasion of the German troops and the creation of the Protectorate. Since 1941 Jews have to wear the humiliating star on their clothes and many more special regulations and restrictions - the purpose of which is to isolate Jews from public life - follow. Nevertheless, the Jews still believe that all of this has to end soon. Ann Hyndráková - at this point still Kovanicová - experienced bullying in school, wasn't allowed to run in squares and parks or to greet acquaintances. Eventually, the only remaining place where she could play was the Jewish graveyards in Vinohrady, Old town and the so-called Hagibor. The father of the family lost his job and was forced to paint lamp shades from home with the help of his children to provide for the basic living needs of the family. With the advent of 1942 begins the tragic story of the Kovanic family. In the end of this story, Anna is the only family member to survive. The family got on a transport to the Theresienstadt ghetto (in Czech Terezínské ghetto) in October 1942 after having spent six weeks in a gathering camp in Prague-Holešovice. They arrived in Theresienstadt on October 24th. Ann's pregnant sister, Truda, and her husband Francis were already waiting in Theresienstadt for them. In the summer of 1944 Ann and her parents were chosen for the transport eastwards to Auschwitz. After the arrival in Auschwitz and a temporary stay in the so-called "family camp" there followed the notorious selection. Ann passed and was sent to the so-called "Frauenlager", i.e. the part of the camp for women, whereas her parents didn't pass and were subsequently - after a short stay in the family camp on the other side of the platform - sent to the gas chambers. Ann's sister Truda and her little daughter arrived in Auschwitz in the autumn and were sent from the transport directly to the gas chambers. Ann Kovanicová (Hyndráková) was able to get out of the extermination camp after some time and subsequently lived in several other camps that, however, had more favorable regimes. Together with two friends, she later managed to escape from the death march dispatched from Christianstadt to the infamous Bergen-Belsen. After a few days on the run, however, they were caught by the SS and sent back to the labor camp Niesky and later on to Görlitz, which was headed by the sadistic murderer, a professional villain, Hermann Czech. Ann Kovanicová (Hyndráková) left Görlitz by the beginning of May 1945, when the approach of the Red army led to the disintegration of the camp's administration and guard. She left on horse-drawn cart together with twelve other people that were subsequently leaving for their homes. She reached Prague together with three other people by holding a poster saying, "From the concentration camp, back home". From Ann's family, however, nobody but herself returned.

Krzystkowice (earlier Christianstadt)

Available in: English | Česky

Since July 1944, there was a subsidiary camp of the Gross-Rosen concentration camp in Krzystkowice. Women, who were brought here from Auschwitz, worked in an ammunition and chemical factory. Up to a thousand women were imprisoned in this concentration camp. Since 1988 Krzystkowice has been administratively joined to a neighbouring village named Nowogród Bobrzański, and the entire junction bears the name of the latter.

Krzystkowice (earlier Christianstadt)

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It wasn’t human but more human than elsewhere

It wasn’t human but more human than elsewhere

Anna Hyndráková
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