There's a letter from a Auschwitz prisoner, here's what he wrote about the horrors happening there.

Najari placed the letter in a thermos, which then put it in a leather bag and buried it underground. The manuscript has been restored and published recently. Months before the liberation of the Auschwitz camp in January 1945, Jew Marcel Nadjari secretly wrote all the horrors he experienced in the camp. [...]
Najari placed the letter in a thermos, which then put it in a leather bag and buried it underground. The manuscript has been restored and published recently.
Months before the liberation of the Auschwitz camp in January 1945, Jew Marcel Nadjari secretly wrote all the horrors he experienced in the camp.
Historian Pavel Polycan told “Deutche wele” that a total of nine documents have been found in Auschwitz's territory, which he describes as the most important written evidence of the Holocaust.
Marcel Nadjari and four prisoners of camp “zonderkomand”, who was responsible for transporting corpses from gas chambers to crematoriums, and throwing ashes of their bones into the rivers.
Naíri's letter, found in 1980, is written in his native language. The letter was completely unreadable until he underwent multiscopic tests in this project, which lasted a year. In this case, 90 percent of the manuscript has been restored.
We carried the bodies of innocent women and children who were thrown into large furnaces. You'll think how could you do that? ) I thought many times that I was throwing myself into the fire and that everything was finally over. But I can't forget revenge. I lived for him. I wanted to avenge the death of my parents and my younger sister, Neli”, he wrote in his letter.
Although he failed to retaliate, Nadar survived. He died in New York in 1971.

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