This is perhaps the most detailed autobiographical account of WW2 concentration camp confinement that has appeared in print. But very little of it deals with directly with the extermination of Jews. Instead it details the operation of a sequestered group of Jewish prisoners who were individually selected from many concentration camps because of their skill related to engraving and typography. The Nazi objective was to produce counterfeited English pound notes which would be used to sabotage the British financial system. That would occur by injecting millions of fake currency into circulation aiming to bankrupt the Bank of England. To only a minor extent the objective did succeed in doing so.
The author, Moritz Nachtstern, was a Norwegian-born Jew who optimistically chose to stay in Norway by keeping a low profile rather than to escape to Sweden, Britain, Canada or the U.S.A. as did the other members of his family and fellow Jews soon after the April, 1940, German occupation. Hitler’s ‘Final Solution’ (the extermination of the Jews) did not have much impact on Norway until mid-1942 when Jews were required to register with the Quisling-controlled police. In October arrests were made and about eight hundred Jews were deported by ship from Oslo destined for Auschwitz. But, by a fortuitous circumstance Nachtstern avoided being gassed. Instead he was selected to become a member of the counterfeiting group that was being established in a unit of the Sachsenhausen concentration camp located in the outskirts of Berlin. There he became an integral and successful part of producing the fake English notes in forced collaboration with an array of Jews from a dozen and more European countries.
Almost the entire narrative recounts the conditions and events in connected with the counterfeiting operation as it affected dozens of individuals. The reader becomes acquainted with these men and their SS officers and subordinates, their meager diets, their slavish working conditions, their injurious tortures, their subjection to cutthroat gamesmanship, their rivalries and camaraderie, their covert conversations and shenanigans. Some readers may find the detailed day-to-day accounts repetitive and boring, however situations are frequently interrupted by the heartless vagaries of their superiors. I thought that what seemed to be insignificant events needed to be included to provide the complete picture. This book recreates the ruthless atmosphere that threatened a tiny specialized segment among the millions of Jews who were subjected to the Nazi objective to decimate their race.