Home
The Meeting: an Auschwitz Survivor Confronts SS Physician
Barnes and Noble
Loading Inventory...
The Meeting: an Auschwitz Survivor Confronts SS Physician in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $19.95

Barnes and Noble
The Meeting: an Auschwitz Survivor Confronts SS Physician in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $19.95
Loading Inventory...
Size: Hardcover
Fifty years after the war Dagmar Ostermann, a former prisoner at AuschwitzBirkenau, and Hans Wilhelm Münch, former Nazi and SS physician, talk face to face. In this rare interview Münchthe only SS member acquitted during the 1947 Cracow war crimes trial refers to himself as a "victim," claiming that because he had to follow orders he was "no less a victim than his prisoners." The Meeting grew out of a documentary film in which Münch was first interviewed by Viennese filmmaker Bernhard Frankfurter. As head of the Waffen SS Hygiene Institute Münch had controlled hundreds of lives. Intrigued by Münch's responses, Frankfurter arranged for Ostermann, whose mother was German and her father Jewish, to conduct a booklength interview, for which he provided a concluding essay. The dramatic structure of the discussion follows the events of the Nazi occupation chronologically. As Ostermann initiates questions regarding reasons for Münch's involvement (Was it a conscious endeavor? Did he participate willingly?), the book adds important new information to the testimonial literature of the Holocaust.
Fifty years after the war Dagmar Ostermann, a former prisoner at AuschwitzBirkenau, and Hans Wilhelm Münch, former Nazi and SS physician, talk face to face. In this rare interview Münchthe only SS member acquitted during the 1947 Cracow war crimes trial refers to himself as a "victim," claiming that because he had to follow orders he was "no less a victim than his prisoners." The Meeting grew out of a documentary film in which Münch was first interviewed by Viennese filmmaker Bernhard Frankfurter. As head of the Waffen SS Hygiene Institute Münch had controlled hundreds of lives. Intrigued by Münch's responses, Frankfurter arranged for Ostermann, whose mother was German and her father Jewish, to conduct a booklength interview, for which he provided a concluding essay. The dramatic structure of the discussion follows the events of the Nazi occupation chronologically. As Ostermann initiates questions regarding reasons for Münch's involvement (Was it a conscious endeavor? Did he participate willingly?), the book adds important new information to the testimonial literature of the Holocaust.

















