How were you selected for Jaworzno?
I worked in a machine shop in Budapest and uh....I uh, told them that I was a smith. They needed smiths at the Jaworzno.
So your name was called, or your number was called?
Yeah.
And then you were put on the train, a train or a truck?
No, on a truck and we were taken to Jaworzno, which was about 20 kilometers from Auschwitz, about 13 miles.
And what was it like in Jaworzno?
There were 3500 prisoners in this satellite camp. Most of them worked in coal mines, others worked on a construction project, building a power plant. That power plant had to supply electric power for I. G. Farben, a chemical company.
So you were working for I. G. Farben?
I was working at first, in the coal mines. They didn't need a smith, so they put me in the coal mines.
Do you remember what that was like, what you felt like?
I was extremely lucky. I got a job as a railroad switchman.
In the mine?
In the mine. And uh, didn't work hard. Then I uh, suffered an injury on my eye, and uh, I was uh, taken to an infirmary in the camp. I stayed there for awhile, then I was uh, transferred to a construction project, building the power plant. Well, the power plant was being built by Siemens. It was for I. G. Farben, to supply electric power to I. G. Farben, but the construction was conducted by Siemens Electric, a German electric firm.
Were there civilian engineers working on this?
Yes, all the engineers were civilians. And the coal mines, I worked together with civilians, uh, Bohemian, Czech, and Polish civilian miners. They were quite nice, they helped me a great deal. Wouldn't be here if not them.
Why, how did they help?
With food.
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