My name is Anna.
I was 28 years old in the heart of winter when the last spark of my humanity was extinguished. If you are searching history books for tales of bravery, luminous resistance, and glorified heroism, look elsewhere. My story has nothing noble about it.
It is made of mud, betrayal, hunger, and a shame so deep that it encrusts itself in the bones and never leaves again. I am going to tell you how a woman is transformed into an object without a name, without a past, and without the right to pain. It all began at Ravensbrück.
This camp was not merely a place of detention for women. It was a chasm where hunger devoured us from the inside. Hunger is not a simple sensation — it is a rabid beast that gnaws at your brain, erases your memories, your dignity, your sense of self. We were nothing more than gray shadows, staggering skeletons in striped dresses that were far too large. We were dying of cold during the endless roll calls in the snow, battered by the icy wind sweeping in from the lake.
One November morning, the sky hung low and heavy with lethal promises. The loudspeakers crackled, and the order was given to form ranks. SS officers walked through our lines with the measuring gaze of livestock traders evaluating sick animals. They announced they were looking for volunteers for “special work” in another camp. The commander’s metallic voice echoed through the frozen air, pronouncing words that were, to us, an absolute mirage: rations of white bread, jam, sausage, a heated room — and above all, the cruelest and most perfect lie — unconditional release after six months of service. Six months. One hundred and eighty days. And then: freedom.
I did not step forward out of courage or a spirit of adventure. I did it because my knees were giving out beneath me. Because the day before, I had watched a comrade die in suffering on the neighboring straw mattress, and because my stomach was screaming in pain. Dozens of us stepped forward, eyes wide at the promise of a piece of bread. The female guards laughed when they saw us — a dry, cutting laugh. They selected approximately fifty women: the youngest, those whose features had not yet been entirely erased by starvation.
We were taken to the showers, sprayed with disinfectant that burned our scarred skin. We were given clean clothes. They even served us a thick soup. I remember weeping while swallowing that warm broth. I believed, for one miserable second, that the nightmare was lightening. I had not yet understood that one always cleans a tool before putting it to use.
We were loaded into covered trucks. The journey lasted several hours. Through a slit in the tarpaulin, I glimpsed watchtowers, electrified barbed wire, and thousands of prisoners in striped clothing. It was a men’s camp: Buchenwald.
The building we were led to was isolated from the rest of the camp by high wooden fences. It was the Sonderbau — the special building. Inside, a long central corridor was flanked by small numbered doors. The smell was suffocating: cheap disinfectant, rancid soap, and the stifling heat exhaled by large cast-iron radiators.
The head female guard — an imposing woman in a gray uniform — stood before us. She held a riding crop, tapping it nervously against her boot. Her gaze contained neither pity nor hatred. It was the gaze of a foreman surveying machinery.
“You are no longer political prisoners,” she said in a glacial voice. “You are here to maintain the morale of the deserving elements of this camp — the Kapos, the block leaders, those who keep this facility running. You will receive visits from several men every evening. Time is limited. No conversation, no sentiment. You exist here to perform a function. If you fall ill, if you refuse, or if you become useless, the consequence will be immediate and final.”
Reality struck me like a blow to the face. The promise of freedom had been a grotesque illusion. We had surrendered everything for a piece of bread. But the most unbearable shock — the one that broke my soul before a single man had crossed my threshold — came the next day.
We were permitted to walk for a few minutes in a small fenced yard adjoining the building. On the other side of the fence passed a column of female political prisoners assigned to the kitchens. I recognized one of them — a Frenchwoman with whom I had shared a bunk at Ravensbrück. I rushed to the fence, fingers hooked into the metal mesh, a trembling smile on my lips, grateful to see a familiar face.
“Marie!” I whispered.

She stopped. She looked at the yard. She looked at the building with its sealed windows. Then she fixed her eyes on me. Her gaze filled with absolute disgust — not the hatred reserved for an oppressor, but the contempt reserved for a traitor. She turned her head and spat on the ground.
“Collaborator,” she hissed between her teeth before walking on.
I stood frozen, hands locked around the fence. In the eyes of my own sisters in misfortune, I had become something fallen — a woman who had sold her dignity for sausage and warmth. This was my double exile. The SS treated us like disposable inventory, and our comrades considered us pariahs. We were alone — absolutely, definitively alone — locked in a place where we were not asked to perish all at once, but to diminish a little more with each passing evening.
Room number 7. That was my address, my universe, my twelve-square-meter tomb. The room was of a terrifying clinical cleanliness: an iron bed, a thin mattress, a small nightstand, an enamel basin filled with cold water, and a rough wooden chair. There was no window looking outward, only a small sealed skylight near the ceiling admitting a thin thread of icy air.
But the true center of gravity in that room was the door. A massive, heavy door with a thick glass peephole at its center. This small opening was not there to protect us. It was the vigilant eye of the machine. SS guards patrolled the long corridor incessantly, their boots striking the floor at menacing intervals. They would stop before our doors, press their faces to the glass, and observe — ensuring that all was proceeding according to the regulations of the building, that the system was operating without interruption.
The entire arrangement was governed by a chilling, purely bureaucratic logic. The men of Buchenwald — those who had ascended to the upper levels of the prison hierarchy, the Kapos, the block leaders, the kitchen foremen — received printed bonus coupons: a simple rectangular slip of paper stamped by the camp administration, entitling them to exactly fifteen minutes inside our building. We were not human beings. We were a reward distributed for compliant behavior, a production incentive no different from an extra tobacco ration or half a sausage.
I remember with unbearable clarity my first night. Anguish knotted my throat so tightly that breathing became a labor. My heart pounded against my protruding ribs. I sat on the edge of the bed, dressed in a coarse gray shift.
Then a shrill bell — like the one that signals shift changes in an industrial plant — rang through the building. The heavy sound of bolts being pulled back echoed in unison along the corridor. My door handle turned.
The man who entered was not a screaming monster. He was not a guard in a dark uniform. He was a prisoner — wearing the striped clothing and green triangle of a common criminal. He had a massive build, a reddened face, features filled out by rations far more generous than those of ordinary detainees.
He entered in silence. He closed the door. He placed his bonus coupon on the wooden chair with the indifference of a customer setting change on a counter. He did not speak a single word. The SS regulations forbade any conversation, any exchange that might remind us we possessed something resembling a soul. He did not seek my gaze. I was present to fulfill a function — nothing more.
What followed was not marked by loud cruelty or passionate fury. It was a silent, methodical, crushing subjugation. The worst part was not the physical suffering, though my body — weakened by months of deprivation at Ravensbrück — suffered terribly beneath his weight and mechanical indifference. The worst, the absolute horror of that moment, was the complete erasure of my personhood. I was treated as an object — a receptacle — something to be used and set aside, with his eyes fixed on the peeling wall behind me as though I were not present at all.
Partway through, I heard a faint sound at the door. I turned my head. Behind the peephole, a pale eye — cold and vaguely satisfied — was watching. An SS guard observing. Verifying compliance. The man noticed too. His breathing shortened slightly, but he did not pause. In this room, modesty and dignity were luxuries that had been stripped away entirely. Humiliation belonged only to me — a dark, suffocating weight in which I drowned with every second that passed.
After exactly fifteen minutes, the bell rang again. Immediately, as though a switch had been flipped, the man stood up, readjusted his clothing, retrieved his jacket, and left the room without a single word or gesture of acknowledgment. Seconds later, the head guard flung the door open and tossed a cloth of dubious cleanliness onto the foot of the bed.
“Clean yourself up. The next one arrives in two minutes.”
Two minutes. One hundred and twenty seconds to collect what remained of oneself.
I dipped the cloth into the icy water of the basin. The water changed color. I was shaking through my entire body, teeth chattering so hard my jaw ached. And it was there — before that blurred reflection, hands submerged in that basin — that I made the most terrifying decision of my life.
To survive what was ahead, I had to perform a kind of internal death.
The Anna who had existed before — the young woman who loved listening to rain falling on the rooftops of Warsaw, the one who had wept with fear on the day of her arrest — had to be put to rest by my own will. If I preserved even the slightest awareness, the faintest flicker of feeling, I would lose my mind before morning. I closed my eyes, held my breath, and commanded my spirit to leave Room Number 7. I retreated deep into myself, into a small, silent fortress — mute and unreachable.
When the second man entered with his own coupon, I was already no longer there. My body remained on the iron bed, but I hovered above it — a detached observer of my own ordeal. Six, sometimes ten men followed one another each evening at the mechanical rhythm of that merciless bell. It was the industrialization of subjugation: an assembly line whose finished product was absolute despair, and in which we were the silent, interchangeable components of a machine designed to obliterate women.
Time in the Sonderbau was no longer measured in days or weeks. It was measured in the clicking of locks, in the footsteps that stopped before our doors, in the ringing of that bell. Winter froze the walls of our prison; spring transformed the black earth of the camp into pestilential mud. The months passed — identical, interminable.
We had survived the first weeks on the strength of the improved rations. The white bread, the slightly thicker soup, the rare slices of sausage had given a deceptive appearance of life to our gaunt bodies. Our faces regained some color. But what food restored on the surface, shame dismantled on the inside with lightning speed. We were the living dead — cosmetically maintained to satisfy the eye of the guards and the appetite of the schedule.
Among the women of the special building, there was no solidarity. Shame is a poison that isolates. When we were permitted to use the common washbasins under a supervisor’s watch, we refused to meet one another’s eyes. To look at another woman was to see one’s own reflection — one’s own erosion — staring back from a stranger’s face. We washed in tomb-like silence, scrubbing our skin with coarse soap in the vain hope of cleaning away a stain that had already reached far deeper than the surface.
But the worst terror — the one that stole our breath in the silent hours before dawn — was neither illness nor exhaustion. It was the fear of pregnancy.
Becoming pregnant in this place was an absolute condemnation. We had no means of protection. The SS regulations formally prohibited pregnancy, as though biology could be compelled to obey administrative orders.
What was inevitable arrived at the end of the fourth month. The woman in Room 11 was named Martha. She was twenty-five years old, a teacher from Krakow — a woman of quiet sweetness who wept silently each night with her head buried beneath her thin pillow. Her body, despite all efforts to conceal it, began to change. Her health showed unmistakable signs. We all knew. No one said anything. Silence was dictated by visceral terror.
One morning, during the routine medical inspection, the camp physician — a neatly dressed SS officer with a blank expression — noticed. He said nothing. He did not raise his voice. He simply made a note in his register, the tip of his pen sliding across the paper with a sinister sound.
That same afternoon, the sentence fell. Two guards came for Martha. They did not take her to the main camp infirmary. They dragged her to a small tiled room at the very end of our corridor — a former storage space converted into a clandestine procedure room. There was no proper medical care, no anesthesia — only a brutal orderly armed with unsterilized instruments.
From my room, which I was forbidden to leave, I heard Martha’s voice. Her cries tore through the thin wooden partitions — high-pitched, anguished, animal pleas that lasted for what felt like hours. A forced medical procedure performed without mercy, without skill, and without compassion. Then those cries broke, collapsing into a faint, wet sound. The silence that followed was more terrifying than the screaming.
They returned her to her room, dragged by her arms, and dropped her onto the bed. The hemorrhage was severe. We were not permitted to assist her or bring her so much as a clean cloth. The supervisor opened the door and stated, in a perfectly neutral voice, that Martha had to be ready for the evening schedule.
It was physically impossible. A rapid infection overtook her ravaged body. Two mornings later, at roll call, the door to Room 11 remained silent. Martha had died alone in the night. The guard noted the death without a change in expression. She crossed out a number in her notebook. The guards returned, lifted the young woman’s lifeless body, and placed it on a handcart. We all knew where that cart was going.
That same afternoon, the door of the special building opened again. A new woman appeared — transferred from Ravensbrück. Thin, trembling, her gaze wild with terror, her head freshly shaved. She was pushed into Room 11. She inherited Martha’s bed. The mattress still bore the dark stains that no amount of cleaning had fully removed.
The rotation never stopped. A broken component was immediately replaced with a new one. The machinery of debasement tolerated no pause, no mourning, and no memory.
This account is based on documented testimony from survivors and historical records relating to the forced labor system enforced in Nazi concentration camps during World War II. The Sonderbau system was prosecuted as a crime against humanity in post-war proceedings. The names of victims have been changed or withheld.