The Serbs Chose War, Ruth Mitchel
46. HAHN
THE SECOND-IN-CHARGE of the prison was a reserve officer named
Hahn, a German of local birth and therefore only slowly becoming
thoroughly permeated with the Nazi poison.
He was perhaps the most interesting study in the prison. A typical,
fair, blue-eyed Teuton, he had obviously been born with decent instincts,
and it was strange to watch him slowly deteriorate. In the fight between
decency and beastliness, the former was slowly but thoroughly wiped out.
At first he was really friendly toward me. To the end these jacks-in-office
were curiously uncertain how they ought to treat me, fawning and
browbeating by turns. Their attitude toward me was expressed by Hahn
when, with a puzzled look in his eye, he said: "You are either a great lady or
a great spy-or both." I assured him I was neither.
He had a sort of boisterous affection for me. "Mitchell Ruth!" would ring
out over the noise, and I had to go to the office to see what he wanted. It
was always something silly:
"You are an educated woman: is it true that men are descended from
monkeys? Will the monkeys go to heaven too? Ha ha!"
He used to go in for such absurdities as trying to see which of us could
jump up the most steps. I beat him, but he blamed it on his stiff Prussian
boots. He taught me a good jujitsu trick or two. Several times he did small
kindnesses to the women but was furious if thanked.
His behavior was so good at first that one day I said to him: "After the
war is over you will be wanting a job. I will give you a job with my horses.
"In America?" he asked eagerly.
Among the prisoners was an old friend of his, whose charming wife and
children had been allowed to visit him. Came the order that this man was to
be shot for alleged complicity in sabotage. I knew that Hahn himself knew
well that his friend could not possibly have been even cognizant of the
affair. It was horrible to watch the struggle in
that officer's soul-to see what the fiendish Nazi doctrine has done
to a once self-respecting race.
Hahn made his friend drink two bottles of brandy, so that he was
taken out almost unconscious to execution. That night the Nazis shot
128 Serbs, not all from our prison. And for four days Hahn drank
steadily and could not eat a mouthful. I knew, because I had to place
and remove his meals.
As conditions in the prison became steadily more frightful, Hahn
drank more and more.
At last, one day with icy cynicism he told Lidia, who cleaned the
office (I wasn't allowed in, because they couldn't trust me not to look
at the papers!), that they had decided it was a waste of time to take
those to be executed out to the park. That night, he announced, they
would start shooting in the cellar. When the radio went very loud
she would know it was going to start.
The office radio blared practically without ceasing from early morning
until late at night. News (only interesting for what it did not
say), military bands, and worst of all an everlasting tinkle of little
dance tunes went on and on maddeningly.
I tried to prevent word of the expected cellar butchering from
getting round among the women-in vain. I hoped that it had been
said only with the never-ending intention of cowing us. But no-this
time it was true.
Towards midnight the radio suddenly rose to a fearful roar. The
door of our cell, the only one between the office and the steps to the
cellar, was wide open because of the suffocating heat. In the dim
reflection from the brightly lit corridor my women-there were
twenty of us now packed tightly in the cell-sat up on the straw, their
eyes wide, their faces drawn with indescribable agony and dread. You
see, almost all the men in the cellar were our relatives, husbands, sons,
fathers, or our friends.
Then, past the lighted wide, low doorway in the three-foot-thick
wall, there came an unforgettable sight: springing, crouching like a
hunting beast, his fair hair hanging over his glittering eyes, came
Hahn, half drunk. Swinging in his hand was a rifle with a silencer
attached to it.
Before the door he hesitated for a fraction of a second-as if some
small, long-buried bell had struck in his brain. He threw in a wolfish
glare and then sprang on.
The radio did not drown the shots.
Slowly we counted as if each one were exploding in our hearts.
No other sound, no cry; just-dance music and thirteen muffled
shots.
Soon there came the trample of heavy-booted feet in the yard,
and grunts as the corpses were removed. An engine started noisily
and drew away.
Then the endless slow stamp of the guards began again-up and
down, up and down the corridors.
The radio stopped. There was silence in that hellhouse.
There was no sleep for us that night; only strangled, dry sobs and
frantic, whispered prayers. Hahn did not return.
Towards morning I climbed to the window and peered out through
the crack under the wooden shutter. There, in the wan moonlight of
the dimly lit yard, on a bench by the gate sat Hahn in an attitude of
utter despair.
Yet next morning the fellow sneeringly announced: "Oh, it was too
much trouble to haul out the bodies. Easier after all to take them out
on the hoof!"
There were many Germans, like Hahn, in whose souls native
decency fought with Nazi viciousness. Sometimes decency won;
this alone can explain the great number of desertions from the
German Army. The Serbian forests were said to be full of these
deserters, almost all young men who arrived as Nazi idealists, to be
soulsickened by the horror to which their cynical doctrine must
logically and inevitably lead.
At one time it was said that there was an organized unit of
German soldiers fighting on the side of the Chetniks against the
Nazis. Certain it is that the number of desertions was so large that
printed notices were posted on lampposts throughout the country,
announcing: "Anyone who supplies a German soldier or officer with
civilian clothes will be shot." The Serb peasants hung coats on their
fences and clotheslines. In the morning these would be gone; in their
place a few pennies and a German soldier's jacket to be quickly
burned.
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