Вдогонку (с сайта Джона Сэка/johnsack.com)

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Lola Potok. One month after escaping from Auschwitz,
she wore a Luger and commanded a prison for 1,000 Germans. At first vicious, later she risked her life to save the Germans she hated.

Shlomo Morel. "I am a Jew," he told his
German prisoners. "I was at Auschwitz and swore that I’d pay you Nazis
back." He then beat the Germans to death with clubs, crowbars, stools and
the Germans’ own crutches.
Adam Krawecki. Liberated from Auschwitz, he beat the
Germans until they "confessed," then sent them to Shlomo’s
concentration camp. "Our judges, I’m sure, will show mercy," he once
told a German priest.

Barek Eisenstein (with his wife). "My blood
is boiling," he thundered, becoming the first man from Auschwitz in the
uniformed organization: the Office of State Security. To his surprise,
three-fourths of the officers there were Jews.

Shlomo Singer (with his wife). A man who couldn't
hurt a beetle, he still joined the Office of State Security. Then, at the
risk of his life, he told the Jews who tortured the Germans, "This
isn’t right. You must stop it."

Chaim Studniberg. The Director of Prisons for
Silesia, he copied the SS’s evil eye and the SS’s twisted lip
and, for the 5,000,000 Germans of Silesia, longed for the same solution that Hitler had had
for the Jews.

Pinek Maka. At age 23, he was Secretary of State
Security for Silesia. He told the Red Cross, which wanted to inspect his
Silesian camps, "You didn’t help the Jews, and I won’t oblige you. Go
to hell."

Jacob Berman. A doctor of philosophy, a man who
wore tailored suits fit for Wall Street, he was the chief of the Office of State
Security. In his custody from 60,000 to 80,000 Germans died.