The silence that follows a trauma is often heavier than the event itself. We understood instinctively that to react was to invite an end we weren’t ready for, so many of us simply existed in a state of quiet obedience. I share this with you now because my story is not mine alone; it is a tapestry woven from the lives of thousands who never found the words—or the chance—to speak.
The Arrival and the Sorting Room
I was taken from my village alongside six other girls. We were crowded into the back of a military truck, the world outside hidden by a heavy tarpaulin. There were no seats, only the vibrating metal floor beneath us. We rode for hours in a silence so thick it felt like a physical weight. By the time the truck hissed to a halt, the sun had long since vanished.
We were led into a courtyard illuminated by a harsh, electric glare. Before us stood a dark brick building with narrow, barred windows. It had the look of an abandoned hospital, but the air around it was thick with a sharp, chemical scent that turned my stomach. Inside, a woman in a grey uniform, her hair pulled into a severe bun, lined us up in a corridor that smelled of antiseptic and damp wool.
“Next,” she said. Her voice wasn’t loud, but it had the mechanical coldness of a factory worker sorting parts.
The process was industrial. One by one, women entered a door at the end of the hall and emerged minutes later with hollow eyes, directed toward different wings of the building. When it was my turn, I was pushed into a room lit by a single hanging bulb. Three men waited there: two in uniform and one in a white lab coat.
They did not look at me as a person. They looked at me as an object to be appraised. The man in the coat gestured for me to remove my clothing. I hesitated, but a sharp command followed. I stood exposed in that cold room while he checked my teeth, my joints, and my strength. He muttered a few words in German to the others, a number was scrawled on a ledger, and I was told to dress. I was then directed through the back door.

The Three Destinies
Only much later did I understand the geometry of that building. It was a center designed to categorize human utility into three distinct paths:
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The Left Door (The Medical Wing): This was for those deemed “interesting.” It was a place of clinical cruelty where experiments were conducted without mercy or anesthesia. Many never returned; those who did were physically and emotionally scarred, their futures stolen by needles and knives.
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The Right Door (The Soldiers’ Wing): This was reserved for those the officers deemed healthy and desirable. They were kept in forced confinement, subjected to daily violations, and treated as disposable property. The light in their eyes usually extinguished long before their bodies gave out.
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The Back Door (Forced Labor): This led to the munitions factories. It was a life of twelve-hour shifts, toxic fumes, and starvation, but it offered a narrow sliver of hope for survival.
I was sent to the factory. Perhaps it was because of my build, or perhaps simply because the labor quota wasn’t met that day. In that place, survival was a matter of grim, mechanical persistence.
Life in the Factory
We were housed in wooden barracks with leaking roofs. Each morning at 5:00 AM, we were given a piece of hard black bread and a bowl of thin, grey soup. Then, we marched to the factory—a massive brick structure blackened by soot.
Our task was to assemble detonators for shells. It was meticulous, dangerous work. One wrong move, one pin inserted with too much pressure, and the room could ignite. I watched a young woman named Hélène lose three fingers in an instant. She was back at her station the next day, her hand wrapped in bloody rags, because to be “unusable” was to be “disposable.”
After six months, the physical toll became visible. My hair fell out in clumps. My skin took on a translucent, greyish hue. Yet, I held on. I clung to the memory of my mother’s face, though as the hunger sharpened, even that memory began to blur at the edges.
The Words of Marguerite
A girl named Marguerite arrived in our barracks later that year. She was only eighteen, captured for distributing resistance leaflets. She had been sent to the soldiers’ wing first, and when she was deemed “exhausted,” she was transferred to us.
One night, she whispered to me, “They treat us like cattle, but we are not. We are human, and one day, this will end.” Marguerite passed away three weeks later from pneumonia. She didn’t live to see the end, but her words became a hidden flame I carried inside me.
The Long Road Home
In the final months of 1944, as Allied forces advanced, the center was evacuated. We were moved like freight from one camp to another as the guards tried to erase the evidence of their work. I was eventually liberated by American soldiers near the German border. I remember the look on one soldier’s face when he saw us—a look of pure, unadulterated horror. It was the first time in a long time I realized I was still a human being.
Returning to my village was like walking through a dream. My father had passed away, but my mother was there. She held me and wept for hours, her tears soaking my hair. I didn’t cry. The part of me that knew how to cry had been cauterized in that factory.
For decades, I lived a life of “quiet normality.” I married a man named Henri, who had been a prisoner of war himself. He never asked what happened behind those barred windows, and I never told him. We had children and grandchildren. To the world, I was a wife and a mother. Inside, I was still Number 247.
Breaking the Silence
The trauma of 1943 didn’t stay in the past; it lived in my kitchen, in the market, and in the way I jumped at the sound of a certain accent. In 1988, after years of keeping my story locked in a drawer, I finally wrote to a historian.
It took another twenty years for me to agree to a filmed testimony. In 2011, at the age of eighty-seven, I sat before a camera for three days. I spoke until my voice broke. I described the smell of the corridor, the coldness of the “selection,” and the faces of the women who didn’t make it home.
I realized that silence wasn’t protecting me; it was protecting the memory of the cruelty. By speaking, I was finally returning the names to the numbers.
The Burden of the Survivor
I am often asked how I survived. There is no heroic answer. I survived because of a roll of the dice—because a man in a white coat pointed toward the back door instead of the left or the right.
I carried the guilt of that luck for most of my life. But in the end, I understood that the guilt belongs to the architects of the system, not the victims. Barbarity doesn’t start with the camps; it starts when we stop seeing the person in front of us. It starts with the word “Next.”
I passed away in 2015, but I left my story with my granddaughter. If you are hearing this today, it is because she kept her promise to keep the memory alive. Do not look away. Remember that the distance between civilization and the “sorting room” is much shorter than we like to believe.
If you were standing in that corridor, what would you want the world to remember about you?