The Life of Dachau ~ On Quality and Giving Up

Dachau, Germany -1

Those three words, seared into the mind, bring a pain I cannot define. I want to reach out and feel the cold iron letters, erasing their significance ~ “Arbeit Macht Frei”

The naïveté when I first read this motto ~ “Work sets you free” still burns.  I stepped through the gate into my new home at Dachau, holding fast to this false promise of hope. Hope, because hard work and quality were where I hung my hat.

I’ve since learned.

Dachau, Germany -2

The cold today still gnaws at me within my bones, the chill a constant reminder of Dachau. I adjust my covers fully aware the feeling will never leave, so I lie quietly, shivering. One thought creeping around my mind like a serpent, a repeated whisper: “give up, give in.

My mind drifts back to those first months. Every piece of my body ached, the world seemingly dissolved around me; work was not setting me free, it was killing me.

Dachau, Germany -3

“You do what they say, nothing more and nothing less. Be invisible.” Shukhov, my bunkmate, smiled at me as we gathered our mess tins for breakfast. “There is no life to be had here. The sooner you understand this, the better off you’ll be.”

It had been the worst months of my life, and I was fading fast. Shukhov took me in and taught me to survive. “Giving up is inevitable, and in prison, it is an absolute necessity. If you remain stubborn, they will break you.” 

Not wanting to hear those words, I ignore him but asked, “What do you mean, giving up is inevitable?”

Dachau, Germany -4

“Everyone gives up at some point, be it in life or in prison. For young ones like yourself, it is difficult to grasp, but as you get older, giving up gets easy.” A push toward the mess hall followed Shukhov’s toothless grin as he continued his speech:

“As you age, you realize what’s happening: life is, basically, like sinking in quicksand.  It’s slow at first and takes you by surprise, but there’s a point at which you realize there’s nothing you can do.  You’re going under.  Once you realize you’re sinking in quicksand… the best thing you can do is try not to thrash around, instead prolong the experience, and make it as pleasant as possible.  That’s what giving up is.” 

“On Giving Up” by The Casual Theorist

Dachau, Germany -5

“Give up…give in.”

I began to ponder these words as I stumbled down a blurred hallway, my eyes quickly swollen shut from a slew of punches, a result of bumping into an SS guard. I fought with the idea of giving up before realizing: Dachau is the worst kind of quicksand, and fighting it would kill me.

“A piece of advice you best take to heart,” Müller, a warder and past friend from my neighborhood, whispered to me. “Do not give anyone a reason to draw blood…you will need every drop if you expect to make it in here.”

His meaning echoed the words of Shukhov, “Give up…give in.”

Dachau, Germany -16

I roll out of bed, put the coffee pot on and wonder aloud if people today share the attitude of “giving up” as written by The Casual Theorist, the rationale of short-term thinking to take an easy way out.

Are people unknowingly casting their freedoms away when they choose to slide by with as little effort as possible?

I see it everywhere around me. Eat crap. Watch crap. Drink crap. Talk crap. Gone are aspirations to seek a purer life.  Instead, we quickly get older, and life becomes more difficult. Giving up is a chronic habit. We’ve become too lazy to seek and pursue quality in life.

Dachau, Germany -7

The whistle on my coffee pot goes off, snapping me out of thought, and I slowly get up and shuffle my way to pour a cup. There is a certain art to making a great cup of coffee, art mastered over the years ~ the aroma, the steam, and the color moving together as it flows from the pot to my mug.

A sign of quality, and it takes me back to a time when I first discovered the importance of this word.

Dachau, Germany -77

The darkness of solitary confinement had continued my free-fall. I wondered if I would make it through another day, and then as Müller clicked my peephole shut, it did not close. A blinding beacon of light sliced through the darkness.

Drawing myself up, I saw in the distance the simple beauty of broken rays of sunshine filtering down through a tree. With imagination, I saw tomorrow and my eyes filled with tears.

For the first time in Dachau, I saw a quality of life I had forgotten. Now giving up had meaning. It had a partner: quality.

Dachau, Germany -9

The Statue of the Unknown Prisoner holds power; the resemblance to Shukhov is uncanny, the words just as wise.

Den toten zur ehr den lebenden zur mahnung ~ ‘An honor to those who died, a warning to those who live’

Dachau was filled with days upon days upon days of nothingness. Bitter cold, fear, and constant hunger left just enough energy by lights-out to crawl back into bed and do it all over again tomorrow.

Dachau, Germany -10

Such times were deafening and defeating, but there was an unknown consequence to such days as well. My mind became more in tune with the smallest pieces of quality. Something simple and pure, and while it may have lasted only a few seconds, it felt like a victory.

An invisible curiosity fed this instinctive, private search for meaning. It kept me sane. The misery of cold and hunger had blinded the spirit, but the arrival of quality made the day almost happy.

Dachau, Germany -11

Shukhov lit a small cigarette and spoke thoughtfully, “I’ve figured out we have roughly ten minutes in the morning, another ten at night…the prisoner’s own time.” He looked out the window at the guards getting ready for roll call, and Shukhov added, “All remaining hours belong to the camp.”

Grabbing his bag, he kept talking. “A ridiculously short time, but it never surprises me the quality we can fit in.” He got up from the bench tapping my shoulder to hurry up, “a fine balance we keep. Prison life will not give you time to do anything but give up.”  

Dachau, Germany -12

I laugh at this thought. In such an environment, the modern mind couldn’t function, but then again, the mind can be so strangely efficient when pushed to the brink.

Finishing my cup of coffee, I begin to prepare my oatmeal, more out of habit than hunger. I no longer feel hunger, just a rationalization to supply fuel for my body.

It leads me to wonder, “How could anyone ever understand the true meaning of hunger…?”

Dachau, Germany -13

Meals. “Every day, my mind was sharply focused on each spoonful. Slowly chewing even if there was nothing to chew, just moving it around my mouth trying to trick my stomach into thinking it will be getting more than it actually would…” A story I often share when asked.

As for a story I never share: if you had offered me a choice between “my meal” or “freedom from Dachau” ~ I’d have chosen the meal. Every time. We all would have.

Hunger. Humility. Dachau demanded it.

Dachau, Germany -14

The dullness of a day steals time until years feel like it is all just one long day. Prison life cannot help but defeat a mind, staring at the hours of nothing. I used to wonder if the mind could ever find its way back into reality.

I look around me today, and I see the same. People mindlessly give up, allowing the dullness of a day to stretch out into years.

Pulling my collar tight, I shiver with the oncoming cold.

Dachau, Germany -15

Cold mornings always woke me early. The few extra minutes before reveille were precious. I never wasted a thought for a few more minutes of sleep, too obvious. Instead, I began my plan to make it through the day: the hope for a few more grains of oats at the bottom of the bowl, an honest cut of bread, and, if possible, a drag on a cigarette before the workday began.

Never forgetting I belonged to Dachau whose only goal was to break me.

Dachau, Germany -6

A cold breeze sweeps over my face – a breeze I know comes not from the cool winds outside my window but from a distant memory, a lifetime ago.

In Dachau, the human trait of giving up served me well. I survived and I began to understand the balance between “accepting the inevitable and giving up” and its silent partner, “the inevitable curiosity of quality which leads to the pursuit of life.”

The balance is dynamic, evolving as we age. Every morning, we reconciled within our minds ~ weighing two thoughts: which shall I focus on today?

Dachau, Germany -17
Dachau, Germany -18

120 responses to “The Life of Dachau ~ On Quality and Giving Up”

  1. arlene Avatar

    Hope, one thing that we should not lose amidst trials and tribulations. This is just lovely.

  2. BunKaryudo Avatar

    Thank you for this important post, although given the topic, it was obviously very much more somber in tone than most of your other ones. I think Dachau is a very valuable to visit, however uncomfortable it may make us feel. It is one of those places in the world where the darkness and the light within humanity are starkly evident and where we cannot just fall back into apathy or fashionable cynicism about moral choices.

  3. Chillbrook Avatar

    My visit to Auschwitz and Dachau had such a profound impact on me Randall. I visited in 2004, in February and I struggled to understand how people survived the cold on meagre rations let alone anything else. A place we should all visit I think lest we forget.. Great post!

  4. Bama Avatar

    Such a thought-provoking piece of writing, Randall. And you cleverly relate it to the ‘prison’ so many of us are living in without even realizing. This shows that visiting places like Dachau not only does make us ponder about the atrocities humans did to other humans, but also how to value our lives more, so that each of us won’t merely live a life, but live a well-lived life.

  5. Dotta Raphels Avatar

    “Balance is dynamic,evolving as we age. Every morning we reconciled within our minds, weighing two thoughts: which shall I focus on today?”

    What a powerful thing, the human minde is. Through it we can create freedom, even if we are trapped in a place of no return either presumed or real.
    We just never give up 🙂

  6. derrickjknight Avatar

    A stunning post; beautiful and harrowing, with great profundity

  7. The Life of Dachau ~ On Quality and Giving Up | SueCharltonDotCom Avatar

    […] Source: The Life of Dachau ~ On Quality and Giving Up […]

  8. ulli Avatar

    Awesome and impressive, Randall.

  9. Ashtara Avatar

    Thank you for this deeply moving and thought provoking post…Blessings

  10. T Ibara Photo Avatar

    Hello Randall, thanks so much for sharing. So much to take in and digest. I hope you’re doing we’ll.

  11. Notes To Ponder Avatar

    This post is a gift, thank you for allowing others to not only see, but ponder from your tender, poignant, honest perspective.

  12. Dan Avatar
    Dan

    Strong post that arouses some feelings within me . I visited Auschwitz once in the 80’s . A visit there , I saw that it was true once.

  13. Mary Tang Avatar

    There is such bleak beauty in those images, Randall and reflections in your words. How many of us seek quality for ten minutes in a day? How impoverish modern life can be due to the choices we make.

  14. Mabel Kwong Avatar

    What a deep, melancholic piece, Randall. Brilliant writing, and it is nice to see you make a mention to the book One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich Tribute in the tags. Very apt. Really like how you draw on the different notions of prison – being imprisoned and being forced to give in to the hands of another can be either be a physical and mental thing, or both. That is, we can be confined to a physical location, or confine our thoughts into a certain pattern.

    “we quickly get older and life becomes more difficult. Giving up is a chronic habit. We’ve become too lazy to seek and pursue quality in life.” This line stood out to me, and I think there’s much truth in that. When we get older, we shoulder more responsibilities and at times we might just give in to get things done: eat fast food so we can put off cooking and get back to work, or playing video games. We simply get caught up in work, attaining a certain social status and basically following the crowd. There is always comfort in that, but then again there is only so much we can get out of living a life the straight way. On a side note, there will always – or have been – others who are/have been in a worse position than us.

    Interesting question you end off there. It’s a great question, one that begs us to reflect on what is important to us in a moment of time.

  15. YellowCable Avatar

    Indeed, as we get older, giving up gets easy”. I am wondering why. I am afraid that is not because we get wiser but rather we lost more as we get older. This is very interesting post. It has me thinking although we may not be in such hard situation but in many way of the way we live sometimes your choices are limited.. Very good posts and very moving pictures that go along so well as always!

  16. neihtn2012 Avatar

    A visit to Dachau in the mid of winter really highlights the inhumanity of man to man, and I want to thank you for this post. I can see how preserving Dachau as much like what it used to be is a useful reminder. Unfortunately, terrible things have continued to happen since then, and perhaps many more will take place again somewhere else in the world.

    Some forty years ago, my brother, at 18 years of age, was sent to a “reeducation” camp in South Viet Nam at the end of the war. We were never told where, but two years later my parents received a notice that he had died. The official cause was dysentery. It was probably induced by hard manual labor under a starvation regimen where people were forced to eat anything they could find. He was certainly not the only case, but nobody will ever know the actual numbers.

    I am afraid Dachau will continue to be among us under one guise or another, for we humans still have not found a way not to hate ourselves.

  17. davecenker Avatar

    I’ve often thought that I’d really like to see you write more often, Randall. But then, I realize that it sometimes takes me a full month to completely absorb, through your words and images, everything that you have to offer. Stellar, as always, are your insights and thoughts. This post reminds me of a parallel thought processes we struggle with as human beings. That would be the desire to control our lives. And it is uncanny, to me at least, that the best way that we can gain any semblance of control in our lives, is to let go of it. It is indeed a fine balance that can only be fully appreciated when we provide our minds with the correct focus. This post provides just that – focus on the balance that we need to fully embrace and appreciate a quality of life that far too many take for granted. Thank you.

  18. FlowerAlley Avatar

    This was a haunting look at each choice we make and the fact that some people do not have choices. Sometimes acceptance is the only way to peace.

  19. Timothy Price Avatar
    Timothy Price

    Wonderful post with great photos showing the starkness of Dachau. There is a lot to take in.

  20. doarnicol Avatar

    Truly impressive post, smoothly touching upon important life issues. And.. matters of the soul. Naive or unrealistic as it may sound, I very often have wished that such places never ever existed, grim and dismal as they are. But they do exist, and what we can “learn from it” is exactly what you have so cleverly referred to here.. the giving up. What I have always been ..not so happy about, to put it mildly, is the fact that people eventually end up choosing that.. “sliding by with as little effort as possible.” Meaning they no longer even try to find the inner resources to at least strike some kind of balance between taking up new challenges and giving in to comfort and some sort of resignation, later on in life.
    What is more, I think we have been increasingly witnessing that in young people, unfortunately. Please correct me if I’m wrong. As if they have been somehow “tricked” into thinking that ..sitting back, doing nothing, or not that much, may be.. the ultimate journey, of course, while complaining that they get bored. What happens is.. most of them no longer expose themselves to engaging endeavors, or undertake noble tasks, fight for their dreams.. unaware of the fact that if they did, they would actually learn about ..themselves, at the end of the day. They would add “quality” to their life and maybe have some beautiful fun while at it. The same journey of self-discovery, every step of the way, I believe.
    Thank you, Dalo, for such a moving perspective. What I liked best was the way you.. chose to round it off. All coming down to.. what we choose to focus on every.. morning. So, we do have a choice. 🙂

  21. Sue Dreamwalker Avatar

    Such a poignant post Randall. I felt the stark cold and the reality of the hopelessness .
    You transferred your thoughts so well within your excellent photo’s of portraying the emotions of those who found themselves in this hell hole of Dachau.

    I followed your link to the post you linked with ‘ On Giving Up’ The Casual Theorist finding it an interesting read.. So many in today’s world are hooked into a world of virtual reality that has their eyes glazed as to the reality of the real world around them. They have become addicted to the world of advertising that drags them further down the rabbit hole as they sit inside the illusions we create.

    Loved your sentence which said “I look around me today and I see the same. People mindlessly giving up, allowing the dullness of a day to stretch out into years.”
    You then rounded it off perfectly when you said
    “In Dachau, the human trait of giving up served me well. I survived and I began to understand the balance between “accepting the inevitable and giving up” and its silent partner, “the inevitable curiosity of quality which leads to the pursuit of life.”

    I hope the older I get, the more time I devote in the pursuit of Life dear Randall.. Life becomes precious when you see the years spent inside factories, clocking in and clocking out.. And even though the latter part of my career path was very rewarding supporting others.. Nothing beats supporting yourself to Enjoy the Quality of Life of every single moment, as I do now in retirement.

    Thank you Randall for an excellent post reminding us of History ..We must not forget they too were labelled as there are also those out there right now who know Hunger, who are imprisoned within the judgments of others as they are labelled refugees and shunted from pillar to post.. No walls hold them, but still they too are prisoners in the history we are now creating.
    Excellent read and wonderfully presented Randall..
    Blessings Sue

  22. Sonel Avatar
    Sonel

    Now it’s my turn to be say ‘Wow’ Randall. One day when I grow up I want to be an awesome photographer like you. I also so love the stories you weave around your stunning captures. 😀

    The cherub with the serpent is my absolutely favourite and it looks awesome in Blank and White. It really adds a life-like quality to it.

    The saying by the Casual Theorist on giving up is so true and it’s a fact. No use in swimming against the flow and all we can do is just make it as pleasant as possible. Life is so short.

    You summed it up perfectly. “Eat crap. Watch crap. Drink crap. Talk crap.” Most people are not interested in living quality lives. For most of them it’s all about the quantity of friends and money they must have and because of that they pass through life with swollen eyes in their own little prisons.

    I love the words on the statue. So true and so wise.

    Through your absolutely amazing captures and your well-written words, the lovely quality of your life can be seen Randall. A great lesson to all of us. Thanks for sharing. 😀 ♥

  23. dfolstad58 Avatar

    The attention to detail shows. Strong post that visually and in the narrative grabbed the reader. Quality!

  24. Writing to Freedom Avatar

    Stunning and haunting post Randall. You seemed to have transported yourself into the life of a prisoner. Did you talk to prisoners or create all this from visiting and imagining? Regardless, thanks for your poignant reminder to hold onto hope, watch our focus and do the best we can to live, love and move forward. Many of us have had easy lives, and still not taken advantage of living fully. Thanks for the wak- up.

  25. Maverick ~ Avatar

    Powerful piece, thank you Randall.

  26. Mél@nie Avatar

    thank you, Sir! I may visit the concentration camps some day… it’s still heartbreaking, as I’ve met a few French and Romanian survivors… meanwhile, I did visit Hiroshima & Nagasaki… and I cried oceans… 😦 ❤

  27. Gunta Avatar

    This certainly is a post that will take time to process. It takes me back to a time when I was still very young and came across some literature my family had with pictures of what was found at various death camps. The mind tends to recoil at these examples of man’s inhumanity. Very, very strong stuff you present here.

  28. Mick Canning Avatar

    ‘Lest we forget.’ A very good and a very moving piece. Thank you for posting it.

  29. AmyRose🌹 Avatar

    I am weeping as I write this, Randall. How this death camp is mirrored in so many today, their eyes glazed over in starvation and deprivation in a world gone mad. What I speak of here is what you speak of, how the majority no longer live with quality but only with quantity. I weep because I know of one who doesn’t cherish life but rather is one of the walking dead. Like SO many. Aspirations gone, passions gone, sparkle and zest gone, and in their place a senseless crush of more more more leading to death. No excitement to embrace life, to speak up for what is right, heck to live right! People hating people, people lashing out at others, no respect, no warmth, just coldness like their rattling empty hearts. How I weep for those who were actually in these death prisons and for the families of these people. When will human beings learn that they are LOVE and stop hating both others and themselves? Oh, Randall, when??? POWERFUL POST. I’m still crying.

  30. danaiana Avatar

    Very difficult to view these photos, to read your words and not be moved. It is a great article. Thanks !

  31. Audrey Dawn - Oldest Daughter Redheaded Sister Avatar

    “the inevitable curiosity of quality which leads to the pursuit of life.”

    It was as if those words opened a door all by themselves, wasn’t it, Dalo? Quality. Yes. I’m focused on pursuing what makes right in my soul. The quality of the life I lead, if even a day, must surely be satisfying. My wish.

    Haunting photography, Randall. Photo #8 is my favorite. I can only imagine the inspiring silence as you captured the essence for this piece above. Thank you for sharing your talent and calm wisdom with us. Quite humbling to sit here on my porch this evening with a glass of tea. Blessings, Photographer. Always.

  32. Healing Grief Avatar

    A deeply reflective post Randall. The silence in the pictures speak a thousand words. Very moving.

  33. Eliza Waters Avatar

    I imagine one cannot come away from a visit to Dachau unchanged. A monument and reminder of the costs of man’s inhumanity to man.

  34. Vicki Avatar

    Such a sombre and haunting post, but amazing images.

  35. sedge808 Avatar

    brilliant post.

  36. sedge808 Avatar

    Reblogged this on Noir.

  37. Edwin Tan Avatar

    Love this. I had the same feeling of hopelessness when I visited S21 in Phnom Penh.

  38. Tina Schell Avatar

    As always Randall, you have captured the essence of the place and given us a push to think about the people who lived and often died there. Never forget.

  39. Kat Avatar
    Kat

    Stunning photos, Randall, and thought-provoking post, and rightfully so, for places like Dachau, Auschwitz…and other places that had witnessed despicable atrocities. I enjoyed reading this post and on many levels, agree with your sentiments but I can’t describe my thoughts eloquently, unlike others. Hope you don’t mind. I hope the world doesn’t forget these atrocities including the ones happening in some parts of our world now. With media moving very fast catching the latest news, trends, etc, I wonder, if people have become desensitised after a while so much so that they just shut themselves out from such realities… ” Giving up is a chronic habit. We’ve become too lazy to seek and pursue quality in life.”

  40. Malcolm Greenhill Avatar

    Dalo, your posts are usually so moving and uplifting because of the exceptional quality of your images and the earnestness of your commentary. However, most unusually, this post uses those same qualities to force us to confront the existential issue of our own mortality and in particular how we react to the inevitability of ageing. For what it’s worth, I think you are right that we need somehow to balance the “giving up” and the “pursuit of life”. But that’s my rational side agreeing with you. Emotionally I’m completely with Dylan Thomas when he writes:

    Do not go gentle into that good night,
    Old age should burn and rave at close of day;
    Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

  41. betsydionne Avatar
    betsydionne

    Haunting.

  42. Opinionated Man Avatar

    Love the hallway shot!

  43. benvenutocellini Avatar

    Oh, well, Oh! well!!…. !!! I am speechless. The choice of the argument itself in the actual political context… You never fail to amaze me. Never.

  44. Cardinal Guzman Avatar

    Work doesn’t set me free either. On the contrary: it enslaves me.

  45. LaVagabonde Avatar
    LaVagabonde

    Your austere images and words are so powerful.

    “Are people unknowingly casting their freedoms away when they choose to slide by with as little effort as possible?” –this floored me. YES. We may not be confined to a small physical space, but we are enslaved. Maybe even more so than those behind walls, because most of us aren’t aware of it.

  46. Charlotte Hoather Avatar

    Just the kick up the bum you need to go do something worthwhile today. Wonderful message and photography.

  47. Sue Vincent Avatar
  48. Beauty Along the Road Avatar

    Your images are haunting, Randall. The fact that it’s winter, adds to the desolation of this stark place. I made it a point to visit Dachau before I emigrated to the US in my early twenties. Of course, I’ve read Victor Frankl’s book on finding meaning, as only that frame of mind helped people survive. You compare your “memory” of being in the camp with the struggle to find meaning in our contemporary times, especially as we age. There’s more than enough material here for a book! The commercial and political brainwashing, the numbing we seek from the overwhelming complexities and suffering of modern life, the travesty all of us are causing to the planet and other humans with our very life styles….even though I’ve made a great effort in my personal life to counteract that (by moving to the country, living off the land, living simply without excess consumption, not letting myself be defined by my “stuff”, reading about what’s really happening in the world, caring for the environment, helping out in small ways…), I am beginning to look at the futility of it all: the oceans are on the verge of collapsing from all the trash we’ve generated, the poles are melting, species and environments are fading quickly, constant wars for the enrichment of the few, crap food and crap materials for instant gratification rather than quality and care. What have we done? And we thought Dachau taught us anything?

  49. ghostmmnc Avatar

    We visited Dachau in 1972, and was an experience I’ll never forget.

Leave a reply to Sofia Cancel reply