The scariest picture

A man with an accordion and a group of laughing, flirty young ladies with two officers. They are in uniform, German, but it could have been any random group, at what seems like a company outing, something that occurs quite often even today. Ordinary people having fun together. I often show this photo at the end of my tour to Westerbork. I call it the scariest photograph of World War II that I know.
This photo comes from an album belonging to one Karl-Friedrich Höcker, containing 116 photographs he took at his workplace. This particular photo was indeed taken during an outing on a Sunday afternoon in the summer of 1944 with many of the staff. The location was Solahütte, situated by a lake not far from Auschwitz. Afterward, this cheerful group of officers, doctors, executive and support staff returned to their various camps to continue their work.
It had been a busy summer. Hundreds of thousands of Jews were sent from Hungary to Auschwitz, where they were selected to see who could still work for a while and who, the vast majority, were immediately murdered. The four gas chambers were working overtime. So a relaxing afternoon was well-deserved.
In the photo album, which resurfaced in 2007, there are also unique photos of the camp itself, including images of the notorious selection process, where a doctor condemned people to the barracks or gas chambers within seconds. These photos are now on display in Auschwitz.
But why do I consider this to be the scariest photo of the war?
Because this is a group of very ordinary people, who could have been created in any time and in any place. Certainly, there were notorious sadists in that group, such as Josef Mengele and Josef Kramer, but most were just people who largely continued their ordinary lives after the war. They had families and were, in their daily lives, fathers and mothers, sons and daughters, who somehow had ended up in Auschwitz.
Even now, ordinary people commit terrible acts against other people. There are things happening that I never thought I would witness in my lifetime. And then I look at that photo and get scared.




