{"id":680,"date":"2013-03-26T17:56:56","date_gmt":"2013-03-26T17:56:56","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/primolevicenter.org\/printed-matter\/?p=680"},"modified":"2025-06-04T16:57:59","modified_gmt":"2025-06-04T16:57:59","slug":"dawn-came-upon-us-like-a-betrayer","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/primolevicenter.org\/printed-matter\/dawn-came-upon-us-like-a-betrayer\/","title":{"rendered":"Dawn Came Upon"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Dawn Came Upon Us Like a Betrayer: Jews in the Camp of&nbsp;Fossoli&nbsp;1943-1944<\/p>\n<p><em>This article is based on the introduction to Liliana Picciotto\u2019s book: L\u2019alba ci colse come un tradimento. Gli ebrei nel campo di Fossoli 1943-1944, Mondadori, Milano 2011<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>Liliana Picciotto<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Between 1942 and 1944, probably due to their central&nbsp;location and proximity to the Verona railway junction, the&nbsp;arable fields of Fossoli, near Carpi (Modena) became a fenced-in compound where enemy soldiers and civilians, people arrested during police raids, Jewish citizens and individuals accused of political crimes, were interned by the Italian authorities.<\/p>\n<p>Because of the diversity of its inmates, the camp evolved into a complex institution over time and, commendably, the&nbsp;Fossoli&nbsp;Foundation has chosen to shed light on all aspects of the camp, entrusting each specific area of research to a different historian.&nbsp;I\u2019ve been asked to look into&nbsp;the camp\u2019s role in the persecution of Jews between 1943 and 1944.<\/p>\n<p>Any analysis is impossible without first noting that Fossoli was in fact a number of different&nbsp;camps operating on the same terrain. During the years of the Fascist regime it served various ends: as a detention center for prisoners of war \u2013 administered by the military authorities &#8211; and civilians, including political dissenters destined for deportation; but also as an assembly and transit point &#8211; for individuals rounded up for hard labor and, most importantly, for all Jewish persons&nbsp;destined for deportation to the Nazi&nbsp;extermination&nbsp;camps.&nbsp;This last function of the camp is vital to any genuine understanding of&nbsp;Italian history and its history of Jewish persecution.<\/p>\n<p>Few&nbsp;places&nbsp;in&nbsp;Italy&nbsp;played such a key role in the Italian Shoah as Fossoli&nbsp;of Carpi did.&nbsp;This&nbsp;simple fact is not widely known since, as yet, there&nbsp;has been no in-depth study&nbsp;made of&nbsp;the camp there.<\/p>\n<p>2,845&nbsp;Jews passed through here en route to deportation&nbsp;following arrest on the unwarranted&nbsp;orders of&nbsp;the&nbsp;Italian&nbsp;government.<\/p>\n<p>In&nbsp;this&nbsp;volume&nbsp;I will&nbsp;explore&nbsp;the&nbsp;camp\u2019s role&nbsp;as the principal site for&nbsp;the execution of the Italian Social Republic\u2019s plans for the persecution&nbsp;of Italian Jews&nbsp;\u2013 plans facilitated by the full support and cooperation of the&nbsp;police&nbsp;and administrative&nbsp;infrastructure of its Nazi occupiers.<\/p>\n<p>While it is true&nbsp;that the&nbsp;deportation from Italy of Jews to the death camps was carried out&nbsp;by the army of occupation, there is evidence in Fossoli that the first&nbsp;bricks of&nbsp;that paved&nbsp;road&nbsp;to Auschwitz&nbsp;were laid&nbsp;by the Italian authorities.<\/p>\n<p>We will discover that&nbsp;between mid-September and&nbsp;late November&nbsp;of 1943 the&nbsp;German authorities&nbsp;(both allied&nbsp;and&nbsp;occupying) extended their policy&nbsp;of Jewish extermination to Italy &#8211; carrying out&nbsp;raids&nbsp;and&nbsp;mass murders&nbsp;(including the&nbsp;massacre at Meina) and dispatching&nbsp;the innocent&nbsp;to the death camps&nbsp;at Auschwitz&nbsp;in Upper&nbsp;Silesia.<\/p>\n<p>It will also be shown that, as of November&nbsp;30, 1943,&nbsp;the house-to-house searches of Jewish homes \u2013 and the arrest&nbsp;and subsequent imprisonment of their occupants&nbsp;in the&nbsp;large&nbsp;concentration camp&nbsp;at Fossoli&nbsp;&#8211; all took place under Italian supervision; and that, ultimately, the occupying forces&nbsp;organized the dispatch of those prisoners from Fossoli&nbsp;to Auschwitz and other camps &#8211; prisoners readily delivered to them on a silver platter, without the remotest sign of protest, by the Italian regime.<\/p>\n<p>The creation of the Jewish concentration camp in Fossoli was the immediate consequence of a general&nbsp;order &#8211; issued by Chief of Police Tullio Tamburini on November 30, 1943 &#8211; calling for the arrest of all Italian Jews, at a moment when Italian Jews were still reeling from the shock of the German raids on Jews in all major Italian cities. At dawn on December 1, Italian police began executing the order in cities and small towns across the country.<\/p>\n<p>While it\u2019s true that some policemen generously &#8211; and sometimes even successfully &#8211; tried to warn their intended victims, this does not redeem in any way, I believe, the actions of the Italian bureaucratic and administrative apparatus as a whole, nor limit their accountability in what followed.<\/p>\n<p>Deportations began&nbsp;at&nbsp;the end of January 1944 at a pace largely contingent on conditions at the time:&nbsp;the numbers of people&nbsp;interned&nbsp;in Fossoli, its maximum&nbsp;capacity, the condition of local roads and railways&nbsp;and,&nbsp;not least,&nbsp;the physical capacity for genocide of those camps that were to be the final destination of the&nbsp;deportees.<\/p>\n<p>Together with the Germans, the&nbsp;Italian authorities also bear full responsibility&nbsp;for&nbsp;the frantic escape attempts of entire&nbsp;families forced to&nbsp;leave behind&nbsp;at&nbsp;home or hospital elderly family members too old or infirm to deal with the demands of life as an itinerant refugee.<\/p>\n<p>For&nbsp;most&nbsp;Jews&nbsp;in those years,&nbsp;it was not only&nbsp;virtually impossible to&nbsp;survive, but even to die&nbsp;under&nbsp;one\u2019s own name. And then there were the children: constantly shifted from one lodging to another, their mothers driven nearly mad with fear that their&nbsp;hiding place might at any moment be discovered; the humiliation and anxiety of having to switch identities and carry forged papers, and the added strain for young children trying to remember their assumed names \u2013 frequently names&nbsp;they\u2019d&nbsp;never even heard before (\u201c\u2026from now on, your name is no longer Nathan Levi, do you understand? Your name is now Nando Lubatti.<\/p>\n<p>Repeat after me: &#8220;My name Lubatti Nando, Nando, Lubatti &#8230;\u201d); the&nbsp;torment&nbsp;of silenced games, in hiding places where no one&nbsp;could&nbsp;laugh&nbsp;or cry (\u201c\u2026do not make noise, do not jump, do not flush the toilet, do not cry, do not cough\u2026\u201d); the desperate search for food &#8211; as&nbsp;the absence of ration cards would immediately give away their fugitive status; &#8211; and the&nbsp;agonizing&nbsp;decision to&nbsp;try to reach Switzerland through the mountains, always knowing that even there lay the risk of rejection at the border and exposure to immediate and mortal peril.<\/p>\n<p>The situation frequently grew so desperate that some mothers voluntarily&nbsp;turned themselves in to the Italian authorities with their children, hoping for a glimmer of humanity. And here is one of the more disturbing aspects of&nbsp;this tragic narrative: that, in truth, neither the carabinieri nor&nbsp;the&nbsp;police were inhumane,&nbsp;and prison guards did indeed share&nbsp;cigarettes and conversation with the prisoners, sometimes even removed the handcuffs&nbsp;from&nbsp;&#8220;detainees&#8221;&nbsp;en route to Fossoli. For, in the end, \u2018they were just following orders.\u2019 Orders they had received, and orders they&nbsp;executed. And cruelty was not part of the job required of them.<\/p>\n<p>We can not define these people as brava gente. Brava gente were those individuals&nbsp;who knowingly risked their own&nbsp;lives to rescue&nbsp;Jews in danger.&nbsp;There&nbsp;were many of them and there is an ongoing research project by the Foundation&nbsp;of the Center for Contemporary Jewish Documentation&nbsp;to draw attention to their generosity and contribution to the civil growth of Italy. This project is called&nbsp;Memory of&nbsp;Rescue.<\/p>\n<p>At the same time we must not overlook the behavior of members of Fossoli\u2019s local populace &#8211; many of whom happily exploited each convoy\u2019s departure, bartering razor blades for watches, blankets for precious shoes; and offering cans of chicken and such at substantially inflated prices. And then there was the boost to Fossoli\u2019s economy as local merchants profited handsomely from the sale and transport of essential food supplies to the camp.<\/p>\n<p>With all&nbsp;the&nbsp;activity&nbsp;generated by the camp,&nbsp;how is it&nbsp;possible that no one ever asked who&nbsp;those people&nbsp;were &#8211; those civilians and their families whose arrival was continuous yet intermittent? What were they doing&nbsp;there? Why did they depart in groups? What were those&nbsp;train&nbsp;cars in Carpi with straw on the floor and a waste bin in the corner for, exactly?&nbsp;Why did these civilians depart&nbsp;packed like&nbsp;cattle,&nbsp;bolted in from the outside? Where&nbsp;were they going?&nbsp;Can it be possible that the&nbsp;presence of so many young children and elderly people&nbsp;never challenged&nbsp;the comfortable illusion that&nbsp;they were&nbsp;Jews&nbsp;on their way&nbsp;to&nbsp;work in Germany?<\/p>\n<p>This volume raises another point that bears consideration. That among&nbsp;all the many invoices&nbsp;and receipts&nbsp;for&nbsp;food&nbsp;supplies to&nbsp;the camp &#8211; all still perfectly preserved, complete with&nbsp;official stamps and&nbsp;appropriate signatures &#8211; there are&nbsp;some&nbsp; that specifically relate to the departure of&nbsp;groups of&nbsp;Jews&nbsp;to concentration camps.&nbsp;Those bills are&nbsp;heart-wrenching &#8211; if one&nbsp;can&nbsp;use such a term about&nbsp;items in an accounting ledger.<\/p>\n<p>Here,&nbsp;listed neatly,&nbsp;are the&nbsp;rations distributed to the prisoners before their deportation \u2013 bread, cheese and jam (jam &#8211; for days and days of travel in sealed wagons, with thirst looming?). In addition to bread &#8211; and regularly cited as &#8220;non-refundable&#8221; &#8211; are the sacks the bread was wrapped in. These&nbsp;invoices&nbsp;were&nbsp;submitted&nbsp;to the City of Carpi and the City duly turned them over to the Prefecture for payment. Everything&nbsp;in order, as though&nbsp;they were merely supplies&nbsp;for&nbsp;another protectorate or outpost, a summer camp&nbsp;or some other outlying community.&nbsp;The&nbsp;&#8220;public expenditure&#8221;&nbsp;for the payment of&nbsp;food rations for the deportees would be&nbsp;paid&nbsp;by Italian&nbsp;taxpayers.<\/p>\n<p>If&nbsp;low-level officials failed to express surprise or even curiosity at what was happening, we know for certain that&nbsp;there was no reaction from either the Chief of Police or the Prefect of Modena,&nbsp;who had to have known something terrible lay in store for the&nbsp;Jews after the order of arrest in November, 1943.<\/p>\n<p>And after the actions of those first days of December they would certainly have known &#8211; as would all those in the higher reaches of the administration, including every local Mayor and Questura (Police HQ) &#8211; that these arrests were a prelude to deportation.<\/p>\n<p>Though&nbsp;the&nbsp;formal document noting the agreement between the Italian&nbsp;government&nbsp;and German diplomatic corps&nbsp;has not&nbsp;yet&nbsp;been found, it is&nbsp;clear from any analysis of&nbsp;the operation that&nbsp;it was the&nbsp;Italians who&nbsp;were in charge&nbsp;of the searches, arrests,&nbsp;and assembly of&nbsp;any Jews found;&nbsp;while the Germans took care of their ultimate deportation to the Nazi extermination camps.<\/p>\n<p>By&nbsp;1946, two&nbsp;of the&nbsp;transports that&nbsp;arrived in Auschwitz from Fossoli &#8211;&nbsp;&nbsp;June 5 and August 1, 1944 &#8211; were known to scholars.&nbsp;In his seminal book&nbsp;This was Oswiecim(1946), historian Philip Friedman reported how the prisoner-clerk of the quarantine barracks, an Austrian physician named Otto Wolken &#8211; whose duty was&nbsp;to document&nbsp;with&nbsp;serial numbers&nbsp;each&nbsp;new arrival&nbsp;in that part of Auschwitz-Birkenau,&nbsp;did something heroic. He managed \u2013 at great risk &#8211; to secretly copy the records of all train arrivals there from occupied Europe between October 21, 1943 and October 30, 1944.<br \/>\nFurther&nbsp;details concerning the&nbsp;fate of the arrivals&nbsp;at Birkenau can be found in Danuta Czech\u2019s study&nbsp;conducted on&nbsp;behalf of the State Museum of Oswiecim (Auschwitz).&nbsp; On the basis of surviving documents &#8211; those not burned by the Nazis in retreat &#8211; Czech&nbsp;has reconstructed a record of events that occurred within the&nbsp;camp. It is&nbsp;a kind of diary of horror, where&nbsp;every day&nbsp;the&nbsp;arrival of each train &#8211; and they frequently came hourly &#8211;&nbsp;is documented along with&nbsp;the serial numbers assigned to those who survived the subsequent selection and&nbsp;transfer&nbsp;of slave labor to and from other camps.<\/p>\n<p>For this volume, we\u2019ve used those survivors\u2019 stories that are&nbsp;collected&nbsp;in the archives of the&nbsp;Center for Contemporary Jewish Documentation&nbsp;in&nbsp;Milan, testimony&nbsp;and statements made during the main trials of&nbsp;Nazi war criminals active in Italy; and the painstakingly researched study by Danuta&nbsp;Czech.<\/p>\n<p>For assistance in the gathering of documentary material, we are deeply indebted to Coronel Adolfo Massimo Vitale, president of the Research Committee&nbsp;of Deported Jews&nbsp;who&nbsp;was active&nbsp;in Rome&nbsp;from&nbsp;the summer of 1944 until 1948.<\/p>\n<p>It was Vitale\u2019s investigation&nbsp;of&nbsp;the victims as missing&nbsp;persons that really started research into the German&nbsp;raids and&nbsp;arrests of Jews by the Italian police.&nbsp;In fact, at the time of the liberation of Rome (June 4, 1944) no one knew about the&nbsp;organized&nbsp;murder of Jews&nbsp;in Auschwitz. People only&nbsp;knew that&nbsp;Jews&nbsp;had vanished into thin air, but&nbsp;nothing of their annihilation.<\/p>\n<p>The enormous obstacles to obtaining accurate information were further exacerbated by the fact that Northern Italy was still under the Nazis. So even as the first tentative studies of the victims were beginning in Rome, trains full of deportees&nbsp;were still departing for the German camps from the transit camp&nbsp;at Bolzano, &#8211; which in August&nbsp; 1944 had replaced Fossoli as principal assembly and transportation point.<\/p>\n<p>Vitale was able to find partial&nbsp;lists of the transportations to&nbsp;Fossoli from&nbsp;the&nbsp;police headquarters&nbsp;of various cities as well as&nbsp;4 of the lists of deportees&nbsp;dispatched from Fossoli&nbsp;to concentration camps.<\/p>\n<p>He also&nbsp;conducted research in Carpi with the help of Don Venturelli, archpriest of Fossoli,&nbsp;and sent&nbsp;his lieutenants to Florence and Tuscany on a mission to the recently liberated&nbsp;Northern regions.<\/p>\n<p>His efforts were not&nbsp;in vain. Although he would not find any of the missing persons &#8211; the&nbsp;main goal of his research \u2013 he gathered&nbsp;an extraordinary&nbsp;quantity of invaluable documentary material&nbsp;which has facilitated the&nbsp;compilation of&nbsp;The Book of Memory&nbsp;(Mursia, 1991) and Dawn Came Upon Us Like a Betrayer, The Jews in the Camp of Fossoli (Mondadori, 2010), Primo Levi\u2019s cry before his departure for Auschwitz, for which this book is named.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Dawn Came Upon Us Like a Betrayer: Jews in the Camp of&nbsp;Fossoli&nbsp;1943-1944 This article is based on the introduction to Liliana Picciotto\u2019s book: L\u2019alba ci colse come un tradimento. Gli&#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":685,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"ngg_post_thumbnail":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[5],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-680","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-books"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.0 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Dawn Came Upon - Printed_Matter<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/primolevicenter.org\/printed-matter\/dawn-came-upon-us-like-a-betrayer\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Dawn Came Upon - Printed_Matter\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Dawn Came Upon Us Like a Betrayer: Jews in the Camp of&nbsp;Fossoli&nbsp;1943-1944 This article is based on the introduction to Liliana Picciotto\u2019s book: L\u2019alba ci colse come un tradimento. 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