Brilliant. This was my third Holocaust book in a row, quite by accident (I saw it on a friend's table), and am blown away by the wealth of wisdom to be found in these books. What makes us human? What do we owe one another? What were the psychological factors that led to those rare survivors being able to leave the camps alive? How did everyone else face their death?
"While observing the shapes of the chimney smoke from the crematory, and without losing one’s identification with those who died, one might envision little angels in flight and imagine the shape that one would take oneself at the appropriate time. Such a defense mechanism helped to lessen the camp terrors and the feeling of guilt toward those perished, as it also set a limit to Nazi power: what more can you do to me-I’ll fly out through the chimney. So what?”
"It seems that the moral problems of Auschwitz should be approached in a different way. It is obvious that a society's whole socio-economic and political structure has to affect the formation of a hierarchy of needs and values. As conditions improve, social needs grow and new cultural values appear, to which members of the society aspire."
"In every camp situation there would be prisoners forming into groups-though continually fragmented by the camp system-uniting together in the practice of the basic norm, "Do not harm your neighbor and, if at all possible, save him," even in the most oppressive conditions. It was the prisoner's most important field of battle."