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 Text 2                   
                                                   
 Exercises         
              
A Physicist’s                   
  Life in a Turbulent World                   
              
                  by Abraham Pais 
                   
                    
                     
                   That          
                    morning Johan Van de Kieft came to see Lion and me. He was          
                    an important figure in the resistance movement, in contact          
                    with London. The purpose of his visit was to discuss a  under consideration by the Dutch government-in-exile,          
                    which dealt with the fate of Jewish children who had been          
                    hidden during the war but whose parents had been           
                    and would probably not return. The issue was: Who should be          
                    responsible for them after the war? Van de Kieft wished to          
                    discuss the issue with us because we had been assigned to          
                    represent the           
                    youth movement with the resistance.           
                      After Van de Kieft had          
                    left, Lion and I talked things over and decided that a           
                    should be prepared for use by the resistance. Lion said he          
                    would write it and started at once, while I went to my own          
                    room. Shortly afterward lunch was ready. As we sat down to          
                    our           
                    meal, Lion put his unfinished writing in his jacket pocket - 
                  instead   
                  of storing it in the cache we had prepared for sensitive   
                  material.         
                      After lunch Bert Broer          
                    came to see me. That day we discussed a paper recently published          
                    by the great German physicist Werner Heisenberg on the theory          
                    of .          
                    When the bell rang, I did not pay attention. Only the ladies          
                    were permitted to open the door. Moments later the door to          
                    my room opened. There stood a tall man in           
                    uniform, the skull and bones symbol on his cap, a drawn revolver          
                    in his hand.           
                      My first reaction was a          
                    quick look at the window. Could I jump out? Impossible.           
                      Not saying a word, the          
                    SS man moved his revolver to indicate that Bert and I should          
                    go into the hallway. The women and Lion were herded in there          
                    as well, rounded up by another German. My          
                    strongest recollection of the next moment is the total collapse          
                    of Lion. He was visibly in total panic, had lost          
                    his calm, and moved oddly, causing one of the Germans to hit          
                    him in the face, sending his glasses flying. I heard Jeanne          
                    pleading with one of the men, offering diamonds to let us          
                    go, an offer that enraged them. Next we were led down the          
                    stairs. Two cars were waiting. We three men were shoved in          
                    one, the women in the other. As we drove off, I experienced          
                    fears more intense than I have ever felt in my life. It was          
                    a degree of fear that caused physical pain. My body ached          
                    all over.           
                      As I heard later, the women          
                    were driven to the women's prison. We were taken to Gestapo          
                    headquarters, where the three of us were shoved into separate          
                    rooms. As I was waiting for what was to happen next, I remembered          
                    some advice given to me by resistance members on how to behave          
                    in such situations. First, and most important, try not to          
                    show any fear. Behave politely. Ask for an interpreter who 
                  could translate spoken German into Dutch, to gain time for 
                  replies.           
                      A man came in. I jumped          
                    to attention. As he paced slowly back and forth in the room,          
                    he began to interrogate me, speaking in conversational tones,          
                    never raising his voice. He first asked me if I was a Jew.          
                    I said no, I was not. Whereupon he ordered me to let down          
                    my pants. In Holland in those days           
                    was a procedure applied to Jews only. So I said, "All          
                    right, I am a Jew. But I am also a physicist, and all I did          
                    in that apartment was to pursue my research, as you can verify          
                    from the papers and books in my room." The questioning          
                    went on, the man keeping up his slow pacing. At one point,          
                    when he came quite close to where I was standing, he slapped          
                    me hard in the face, then continued his movements as if nothing          
                    had happened. It          
                    was a shattering moment.           
                    Its   
                  purpose was obvious: not          
                    so much to cause physical pain as to make me lose my mental          
                    balance. Even though the man had succeeded in doing          
                    so, it did not interrupt the interrogation, with the questions          
                    now turning to my possible dealings with the resistance. I          
                    denied any such involvement.           
                      The man left. I waited          
                    again. After a while I was ordered out of the room, 
                  whereupon I met Bert and Lion again, the latter looking ashen. 
                  Once again we were shoved          
                    into a car which brought us to a building that before the          
                    war used to be the city’s            
                              
                    but had become a Gestapo prison. We three were pushed into          
                    a cell and the door was banged shut and locked. I had arrived          
                    at my next war residence, cell IB4.  
    I fell into an exhausted sleep that night, 
to be awakened by banging on the cell door, which then was opened. Like the others, I continued to lie on my bed, awaiting developments.          
                    Moments later a prison guard came in and started yelling at          
                    us. Didn't we know that we had to get up quickly when the          
                    cell was opened, quickly get dressed, place the toilet things          
                    outside the door, then stand at attention to await cell inspection?          
                    No, we didn’t know, but of course we learned quickly.           
                      The days then took on a          
                    regular routine. Meals were miserably small. In the late mornings          
                    we were let out of our cell for airing and walked around for          
                    a short while with other prisoners in a small yard surrounded          
                    by high walls. It was beautiful spring weather. We could see          
                    a triangular piece of pure blue sky through our small barred          
                    window.           
                      Days in prison were mostly          
                    quiet, but nights were bad. We would hear heavy metal doors          
                    clanging, shouts, shrieks. We knew that some poor bastard 
                  was being taken away, but had only grim forebodings as to 
                  where.         
                      The monotony of the days          
                    was broken by periodic interrogations that took place inside          
                    the prison building. Sometimes Lion, sometimes I, was taken          
                    out of our cell. I was brought to a small room and remember          
                    one setting in particular. As I came in I saw a man sitting          
                    behind a desk, leaning back, relaxed, with hands clasped behind          
                    his neck. The room was otherwise bare, as was the desktop,          
                    except for a revolver lying in the middle. I stood in front          
                    of his desk, at attention as always. The man began to speak.          
                    "You will now tell me all you know about the resistance,"          
                    he said calmly, "and you will speak the truth. If you          
                    do, it will help your situation considerably; if you don't,          
                    I shall shoot you right here in this room." I remember          
                    how the thought came to me: he is the animal in this circus,          
                    you are the  ,          
                    look at him like the animal trainer stares steadily at his          
                    beast. I replied to his question as I had done before: "I          
                    had nothing to do with the resistance. It is true that I am          
                    a Jew. But I am just a young scientist absorbed in my work. 
                  I am just a weltfremd, unworldly, young man."          
                      Another day it was Lion's          
                    turn. When he came back that time, he did not walk but rather          
                    stumbled into our cell, quite pale and deeply shaken. "What          
                    happened?" I asked. His reply: "I've been condemned          
                    to death."           
                      My immediate very brief          
                    reaction was and still is astounding to me. It was as if,          
                    inside my head, a blinding light shone and a voice spoke:          
                    I SHALL LIVE. I had not been condemned.           
                      Lion had fallen on his          
                    cot. I picked him up and cradled him in my arms, as one does          
                    a young child. I spoke calming words to him; I do not recall          
                    what I said. He   
                  quieted down somewhat but remained          
                    deeply withdrawn and hard to reach those next few days,   
                  staring out of our little window, unseeing.         
                      Some days later - we were          
                    now well into April - I found upon returning to the cell that          
                    Lion was gone. I sat down on my cot, in despair. What else          
                    could I expect but the worst?           
                      In order to explain what          
                    happened to me next,I must relate what Tineke had been up to 
                  during this time. Right          
                    after my friends and I had been captured, Tineke had gone          
                    to the house on the Hobbemakade where we had been living.          
                    As she rang the bell, the door was opened by a Gestapo agent.          
                    She was arrested on the spot, then interrogated at length.          
                    They had found men’s socks and women’s underwear in the same          
                    room of the house, concluding that Lion had been sleeping          
                    with Jeanne, whose story that she was           
                    had meanwhile been believed by the Gestapo.So the tragic 
                  situation developed that the Germans considerered Lion, 
                  properly married to a Jewish woman, to be guilty of 
                  Rassenschande, racial disgrace.  
 
     After hours of interrogation,          
                      Tineke was let go with the warning that she would be watched,          
                      that she was probably Jewish herself, or hid Jews, or had          
                      a Jewish husband. Kramers, advised by Tineke of my capture,          
                      had meanwhile written (in German) to Heisenberg. Probably          
                      stressing that I was a talented young physicist, or words          
                      to that effect. Kramers had sent a copy of the letter to Tineke.        It was Tineke who got          
                    me out. She had gotten hold of the name and address of a high          
                    Nazi official in Amsterdam and decided to call on him. She          
                    was indeed received in his office. On his desk stood a photo          
                    of ,          
                    with the dedication Fürmeinen Freund (to my friend). Tineke          
                    showed him her copy of Kramers's letter to Heisenberg and          
                    asked for his help. After reading the letter the man did not          
                    say a word to Tineke, but picked up the phone to call the          
                    prison. “Hast du einen Jude Pais dort?” ("Do you have          
                    a Jew, Pais, there?") Yes, they did. "Lass ihn gehen"          
                    ("Let him go").           
                       So it came about that          
                    I gained my freedom because of physics, and because of the          
                    devotion of Kramers and, above all else, of Tineke. (Kramers          
                    later told me he did receive a reply. Heisenberg understood,          
                    he wrote, was very sorry, but could not do anything.)           
                       On one of the last days          
                    in April I was taken out of my cell and brought to the office          
                    of the prison commandant. He told me I was free but would          
                    at once be picked up and shot if I committed any act against          
                    Germany. I stepped out of his office and was brought to a          
                    small window near the exit, behind which sat a           
                    who I knew must be a prisoner. He had to register my departure.          
                    I whispered to him, "He was shot several days ago."          
                    Then the small outer gate was opened. I stepped out on the          
                    street.           
                      (1 835 words)            
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