Sunday, 21 December 2025

 General Dwight D. Eisenhower   the concentration camps

When he arrived with his men at the concentration camps, he had no doubts.


He ordered that as many photographs as possible be taken of the mass graves where bones, clothes, decomposed skeletal bodies were piled up like random pyramids.

Photographs of all the freezing barracks that were used as dormitories, photographs of barbed wire, crematoria, uniforms, caps, control towers, weapons, torture instruments.

Photographs of survivors so close to death that they could speak to them and return them to anyone who looked at them without even having to open their mouths. Without speaking, without words.

Eisenhower demanded that all German residents of nearby towns be taken to concentration camps to see the reality of events and that these civilians be forced to bury the bodies of the dead.

And then he explained: " Let us have as much documentation as possible – whether it be film recordings, photographs, testimonies – because there will come a day when someone will stand up and say that none of this ever happened ."

Because one day someone will come and say that all this never happened: repeat, frame and sanctify this phrase.

What Eisenhower saw when he entered the camps changed him forever. Few accounts capture those moments in full detail, but the records he left behind tell a powerful story about leadership, shock, and the weight of truth.

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