Survival in Auschwitz

by

Primo Levi

Dehumanization and Resistance Theme Analysis

Themes and Colors
Dehumanization and Resistance Theme Icon
Adaptability, Chance, and Survival Theme Icon
Moral Relativity Theme Icon
Racial Hierarchy Theme Icon
Oppression, Power, and Cruelty Theme Icon
LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in Survival in Auschwitz, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.
Dehumanization and Resistance Theme Icon

During World War II, Primo Levi, an Italian Jewish man, narrowly escapes death in a crematorium when he is assigned to be a laborer in the hellish Lager (camp) of Auschwitz in Poland, where he survives for more than a year. His astute recollection of that experience provides a wealth of insight into the Holocaust, one of modern history’s greatest evils, examining the suffering and survival of such horror with a surprising level of self-awareness. Among his most keen observations, Levi’s account of Auschwitz demonstrates that, more than the day-to-day suffering, the Jewish prisoners’ greatest struggle is to remain human in the face of their captors’ constant efforts to dehumanize them.

Although the Levi and his fellow prisoners have narrowly avoided Auschwitz’s death camps—so that their captors can use them as slave labor—the Nazis take every opportunity to dehumanize them in an attempt to destroy their sense of identity and humanity. For instance, when Levi, who has not had anything to drink for several days, finds himself an icicle to drink from, a German guard immediately takes the icicle and throws it away. Levi asks why, since the icicle obviously did not belong to anybody, to which the guard replies, “There is no why here,” suggesting that the suffering of Jewish people and denial of basic needs is an end in itself. Levi realizes that “in this place everything is forbidden, not for hidden reasons, but because the camp has been created for that purpose.” The Jewish prisoners are given numbered tattoos, which come to replace their names except among close friends and describe the only information that is relevant to their life in the camps: their nationality and the period when they arrived at Auschwitz. In his first few weeks, Levi instinctively looks to his wrist to check the time on his watch—confiscated when he entered the camp—which he sees as a mark of a civilized man. However, in its place he only finds his tattooed number, a reminder that he is only one meaningless cog in a “great machine [meant] to reduce us to beasts.” Levi observes that the hellish treatment and hard labor even eliminates many of the prisoners’ basic survival instincts. He watches as a young man literally works himself to death, his body failing; “He has not even the rudimentary astuteness of a draught-horse, which stops pulling a little before it reaches exhaustion.” The young man’s inability to even recognize that he needs rest suggests that the Nazis have successfully stripped him of his basic humanity, making him less astute than even a beast of labor.

Since the Jewish prisoners are largely powerless to resist or fight their physical captivity, resisting their own dehumanization becomes a chief form of opposition to the Nazi’s cruelty and ideology. When Levi, like many others, starts to neglect his own personal hygiene, reasoning that washing his face with filthy water in a filthy camp is pointless, he is severely chastised by an older prisoner named Steinlauf. Steinlauf argues that precisely because the Nazis want to dehumanize them, they must resist and “save at least the skeleton, the scaffolding, the form of civilization,” which can be done most practically by washing one’s face and shirt each day and shining one’s shoes, regardless of the fact that they will soon be dirty again. This suggests that, faced with a dehumanizing environment, holding onto whatever symbols and rituals of the civilized world one can is vital to maintaining one’s own humanity. Although they are slaves, powerless and subject to every cruel whim of the Nazis, they still have the power to “refuse [their] consent,” to resist the dehumanization thrust upon them and so confound their captors’ aims. Thus, the daily rituals to remember one’s own humanity not only save oneself, but also thwart the goals and ideology of their oppressors, giving a small amount of fighting power to otherwise powerless prisoners.

As liberation draws nearer, the survivors of Auschwitz slowly regain their sense of humanity, proving that the Nazis failed in their attempt to completely eradicate Jewish presence, identity, and dignity. After Levi is transferred from working as a hard laborer in the snow to working as chemist in a laboratory, the act of working indoors with fine tools, using his mind rather than his body, and working around young German women slowly returns his sense of civilization and humanity. However, with this return brings painful shame at realizing how “repugnant” and pitiable he appears, and how brutishly he has lived all these months as a prisoner. This demonstrates that Levi has not been sufficiently dehumanized by the Nazis to forget who he is, though the process of becoming human again is painful. When the Germans and the healthy prisoners leave the camp, fleeing the approaching Russian army, Levi is left behind with the ill prisoners to fend for themselves. In the absence of their German oppressors Levi and his fellows begin caring not only for themselves, but for others by gathering and sharing food, an action that was unthinkable while they were surviving under Nazi oppression. Levi calls this “the first human gesture that occurred among us,” saying that it “really meant the Lager was dead.” Despite the Nazis’ aim of so brutalizing the Jewish prisoners that they lose all sense of humanity (an existential death, rather than a physical one), the prisoners’ acts of altruism prove that they failed in their quest.

Although many died in Auschwitz, Levi’s account proves that, despite the Germans’ attempts to dehumanize them and wipe out their sense of identity, the Jewish prisoners ultimately manage to resist and hold onto their humanity. In light of their environment and the Nazi ideology, this endurance and maintenance of their humanity represents its own form of resistance.

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Dehumanization and Resistance Quotes in Survival in Auschwitz

Below you will find the important quotes in Survival in Auschwitz related to the theme of Dehumanization and Resistance.
Chapter 1. The Journey Quotes

But on the morning of the 21st we learned that on the following day the Jews would be leaving. All the Jews, without exception. Even the children, even the old, even the ill […] For every person missing at the roll-call, ten would be shot.

Related Characters: Primo Levi (speaker)
Page Number: 14
Explanation and Analysis:

Here we received the first blows; and it was so new and senseless that we felt no pain, neither in body nor in spirit. Only a profound amazement: how can one hit a man without anger?

Related Characters: Primo Levi (speaker)
Page Number: 16
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 2. On the Bottom Quotes

And for many days, while the habits of freedom still led me to look for the time on my wristwatch, my new name ironically appeared instead, a number tattooed in bluish characters under the skin.

Related Characters: Primo Levi (speaker)
Related Symbols: Tattooed Number
Page Number: 28
Explanation and Analysis:

And do not think that shoes form a factor of secondary importance in the life of the Lager. Death begins with the shoes; for most of us, they show themselves to be instruments of torture, which after a few hours of marching cause painful sores which become fatally infected.

Related Characters: Primo Levi (speaker), Alberto
Related Symbols: Shoes
Page Number: 34
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 3. Initiation Quotes

Precisely because the Lager was a great machine to reduce us to beasts, we must not become beasts; that even in this place once can survive, and therefore one must want to survive, to tell the story, to bear witness; and to survive we must force ourselves to save at least the skeleton, the scaffolding, the form of civilization.

Related Characters: Primo Levi (speaker), Steinlauf
Page Number: 41
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4. Ka-Be Quotes

We, transformed into slaves, have marched a hundred times backwards and forwards to our silent labours, killed in our spirit long before our anonymous death. No one must leave here and so carry to the world, together with the sign impressed on his skin, the evil tidings of what man’s presumption made of man in Auschwitz.

Related Characters: Primo Levi (speaker)
Related Symbols: Tattooed Number
Page Number: 55
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 7. A Good Day Quotes

At least for a few hours, no quarrels arise, we feel good, the Kapo feels no urge to hit us, and we are able to think of our mothers and wives, which usually does not happen. For a few hours we can be unhappy in the manner of free men.

Related Characters: Primo Levi (speaker)
Page Number: 76
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9. The Drowned and the Saved Quotes

We would also like to consider that the Lager was preeminently a gigantic biological and social experiment.

Thousands of individuals, differing in age, condition, origin, language, culture and customs, are enclosed within barbed wire: they live a regular, controlled life which is identical to all and inadequate to all needs, and which is more rigorous than any experimenter could have set up to establish what is essential and what adventitious to the conduct of the human animal in the struggle for life.

Related Characters: Primo Levi (speaker)
Page Number: 87
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 10. Chemical Examination Quotes

Because that look was not one between two men; and if I had known how completely to explain the nature of that look, which came as if across the glass window an aquarium between tow beings who live in different worlds, I would also have explained the essence of the great insanity of the third Germany.

Related Characters: Primo Levi (speaker), Doktor Pannwitz
Page Number: 105
Explanation and Analysis:

Without hatred and without sneering, Alex wipes his hand on my shoulder, both the palm and the back of the hand, to clean it; he would be amazed, the poor brute Alex, If someone told him that today, on the basis of this action, I judge him and Pannwitz and innumerable others like him, big and small, in Auschwitz and everywhere.

Related Characters: Primo Levi (speaker), Alex, Doktor Pannwitz
Page Number: 108
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 12. The Events of Summer Quotes

More generally, experience had shown us many times the vanity of every conjecture; why worry oneself trying to read the into the future when no action, no word of ours could have the minimum influence?

Related Characters: Primo Levi (speaker)
Page Number: 116
Explanation and Analysis:

At Buna the German Civilians raged with the fury of a secure man who wakes up from a long dream of domination and sees his own ruin and is unable to understand it.

Related Characters: Primo Levi (speaker)
Page Number: 118
Explanation and Analysis:

I believe that it was really due to Lorenzo that I am alive today; and not so much for his material aid, as for his having reminded me by his presence, by his natural and plain manner of being good, that there still existed a a just world outside our own, something and someone still pure and whole, not corrupt, not savage, extraneous to hatred and terror; something difficult to define, a remote possibility of good, but for which it was worth surviving.

Related Characters: Primo Levi (speaker), Lorenzo
Page Number: 121
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 13. October 1944 Quotes

Does Kuhn not understand that what has happened today is an abomination, which no propitiatory prayer, no pardon, no expiation by the guilty, which nothing at all in the power of man can ever clean again?

If I was God, I would spit at Kuhn’s prayer.

Related Characters: Primo Levi (speaker)
Page Number: 130
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 14. Kraus Quotes

What a good boy Kraus must have been as a civilian: he will not survive very long here, one can see it at first glance, it is as logical as a theorem.

Related Characters: Primo Levi (speaker), Kraus
Page Number: 134
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 15. Die drei Leute vom Labor Quotes

They construct shelters and trenches, they repair the damage, they build, they fight, they command, they organize, they kill. What else could they do? They are Germans. This way of behavior is not meditated and deliberate, but follows from their nature and from the destiny they have chosen. They could not act different.

Related Characters: Primo Levi (speaker)
Page Number: 141
Explanation and Analysis:

But in the morning, I hardly escape the raging wind and cross the doorstep of the laboratory when I find at my side the comrade of all my peaceful moments, of Ka-Be, of the rest-Sundays—the pain of remembering, the old ferocious suffering of feeling myself a man again, which attacks me life a dog the moment my conscience comes out of the gloom.

Related Characters: Primo Levi (speaker)
Page Number: 142
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 16. The Last One Quotes

At the foot of the gallows, the SS watch us pass with indifferent eyes: their work is finished, and well-finished. The Russians can come now: there are no longer any strong men among us, the last one is now hanging above our heads.

Related Characters: Primo Levi (speaker), Alberto
Page Number: 150
Explanation and Analysis: