In the concentration camps they used to throw babies up in the air as a target to shoot

In the concentration camps they used to throw babies up in the air as a target to shoot





Nazis’ ‘longest-serving prisoner’ saw babies thrown in air and shot down in sick target practice in front of mothers

During the Holocaust the nazis would throw babies up into the air and shoot them as if a target. They would also feed them as a toy to their dogs and let the dogs chew the baby alive. One other horrible thing they would do is they would take babies right out of there mothers arms and grab them by there feet and throw them into walls.

 After they did that they would give the mother back the baby and she had to take it back into the cell with her. How could someone do this to a poor inocent baby or infant? But if you think of this "Total Burn," of the Holocaust. If this never happened what honestly would inspire us not to do it again. If there was no holocaust how would the world be right now? Questions we all would love to here the answer to.

MURRAY Scheinberg watched in horror as the gun-toting Nazi officer snatched a six-month-old baby from its mother and hurled it in the air.

It was 1944 at Auschwitz death camp, and Jewish prisoner Murray was about to witness an act of such extreme cruelty it would haunt him forever.

As the baby flew upwards, the Nazi sneered, “If you can’t walk, you will fly". He then aimed his gun, pulled the trigger and shot the flailing infant dead.

When the mother immediately fainted, she too was shot in the head.

Six years of hell
The brutal double execution was among countless horrors Polish businessman Murray was forced to endure during nearly six years at Auschwitz and other Nazi hellholes.

In 1940, he became one of the first eight Jews to be caged at Auschwitz. Later, he'd be one of the last to escape from another concentration camp - Dachau - with the help of a German officer.

Now, 25 years after Murray's death, his great-niece Marilyn Shimon has told his astonishing story of survival for the first time in her new book, First One In, Last One Out.

She reveals how her courageous 'Uncle Murray' battled through more than half a decade of starvation, torture and bloody beatings after being captured by Hitler's forces.

During this time, he was forced to witness regular 'Death Wall' shootings and participate in sick Nazi games - including "walking" on his skeletal back with his legs in the air.

"My uncle’s story is unique in that he was literally the first one in and the last one out of the concentration camps," says former teacher Marilyn, who lives in New York, US.

 "Every time we went to visit him as children, he'd tell us the same stories. He was very emotional - he'd cry, scream, pace.

"He'd stand up, point to all the scars on his body, say ‘look what they did to me’, and show us his number - 31321 - tattooed on his arm.

"He would tell us, 'If I see a Nazi I will shoot him, no questions asked'. He could not let go. It was part of him until the day he died."

Hero Murray spent much of his life in California, after American soldiers found him hiding in a ditch outside the walls of Dachau, surrounded by his own urine and faeces, in 1945.

Yet the Holocaust survivor actually grew up almost 6,000 miles away, in Polish capital Warsaw, where he lived in a luxurious five-room apartment with his family.

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