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World War II didnt officially end until September
2nd, 1945, but it was generally considered to be over two weeks earlier.
With the announcement that Japan surrendered on August 15th, a flood of
previously classified and other war-related stories hit the newspapers
in the following days.
Among those being published in North Dakota was a letter
received by a Minot attorney from his son, Sgt. Paul McCutcheon, who had
witnessed the conditions in newly liberated concentration camps. The younger
McCutcheon was a Minot State graduate who had worked for International
Harvester before joining the army in 1942. Two years later, he was sent
overseas with a field hospital unit and ultimately ended up caring for
Holocaust survivors.
At Nuremberg, McCutcheon wrote, we
had charge of a number of displaced persons who were for the most part
prisoners of war until liberated. While these cases were bad, they nowhere
came near approaching the persons at this notorious slave labor and concentration
camp. There is a large cemetery here, and beside it a long trench filled
in, in one mass grave, for I dont know how many of the dead.
Believe me, he continued, if you have
seen any...pictures of these camps, you can be just plain damn sure they
show a softened scene. You must understand that now these people are receiving
the best medical care and attention we can give them..., he wrote.
They are fed well, but not the same food as we, for it probably
would prove fatal to them.
The death rate has fallen almost vertically since the
U.S. took over. But some are just too far gone to save.
McCutcheon went on to describe the beauty of the Austrian
countryside, the clear, blue-green water of the Danube River, the small
picturesque farms and victory gardens. But, neither he nor any of his
fellow soldiers ever wanted to see the area again.
Beautiful as it is, he wrote, it is
only skin deep. That is the tragedy of the thing, for the people really
have everything they should want to be peaceful and happy. (But) you know
they are not content... a large portion of their country lies in total
ruins to remind them of their folly... Beautifully landscaped countryside,
he went on, coupled with advanced industrial areas and poverty-stricken
rural communities blissful in their ignorance and above
all, concentration camps, just dont mix.
McCutcheon wrote of the stench of the death camps. Images
of the horrific treatment the human skeletons had endured
would remain with him forever.
To see people, McCutcheon wrote, lots
of them...who are nothing but a skeleton covered with skin... arms and
legs no larger than broomsticks, was sickening enough. To have them fight
over the garbage we throw out, or pathetically to beg for scraps of leftovers,
is almost too much to (handle). But above all is the way they act about
the whole thing... They dart and scurry like rats. Long, skinny bones
dart out to steal whatever they think they can eat or use. If gently reprimanded,
they slink away like dogs with tails between their legs.
Above all else, he wrote, are their
eyes. I wish I could...describe them. They are all big and very prominent.
Its almost the first thing you notice. Like snakes eyes, seeing
everything, watching everything, hunted, hurt, pathetic and as surely
as the sun rises, reflecting like a painted picture the consequences of
mans inhumanity to man...
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prior permission from North Dakota Public Radio.
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