The compelling and harrowing true story of Ron Jones, a 96 year old Welshman who endured and survived the horrors of Auschwitz concentration camp during the Second World War.
The Auschwitz Goalkeeper is a prisoner of war's true story.
It is the story of a man who endured the horrors of the most notorious death camp of them all, before being brutally forced to march across Europe as the SS retreated before the advancing Russians.
This is no sanitised, boys'-own adventure. Indeed, it is a book which gives the lie to the self-glorifying claims of some of Ron Jones's fellow British POWs at Auschwitz:
"I have chosen to speak out 70 years after the event because I am concerned by other accounts which focus on personal heroism and downgrade the conduct of honest, less fanciful prisoners."
It is this sense of outrage that has prompted a 96-year-old man to set the record straight, once and for all:
"It is my intention to tell it exactly as it was. The fact that British POWs ended up in Auschwitz needs no embroidery and receives none here… It was a truly terrible time, and I witnessed things I wouldn't wish my worst enemy to see."
Publisher: Gomer@Lolfa
Ron Jones spent two years as a prisoner of war at Auschwitz, and was one of the many on the forced Death March as the Germans fled the advancing Russian army. They were on the road for seventeen weeks, walking 800 miles during one of the coldest winters on record. He never talked about his experiences until he was in his eighties. Now 96, Jones has worked with journalist Joe Lovejoy to produce a book that combines his own personal story with Lovejoy's carefully researched historical account. Inevitably, The Auschwitz Goalkeeper is a shocking read, but Jones's quiet, unembellished narrative eases the reader's journey through the pages, while Lovejoy's recounting of the facts embraces some of the less well-known aspects of the Auschwitz story.
For instance, 'it is a little-known fact, even today, that IG Farben, not the Nazi government, financed and was therefore responsible for Auschwitz and all its works, including Dr. Josef Mengele's inhuman medical experiments'. IG Farben, a huge chemicals conglomerate, was still in existence in 2012, as a 'corporation in liquidation'. In the 1930s, it was the largest company in Europe and the fourth largest in the world, and it payrolled the Nazis. Its Auschwitz plant produced synthetic rubber and fuel, and Zyklon B - the pesticide that was used in the gas chambers. The plant needed cheap labour, and guinea pigs for its research, both of which it purchased from the concentration camp on its doorstep. In turn, this arrangement provided the Nazis with much-needed funding for the continuing war effort. Auschwitz wasn't just about a ghastly ideology and 'the final solution to the Jewish question in Europe', it was about money and big business and corporate power.
Lovejoy also tackles the perhaps unanswerable question of whether the Allies should have bombed Auschwitz to disrupt, if not put an end to, the exterminations. They bombed the IG Farben factory next door to deprive the Nazis of fuel, but claimed fear of too much collateral damage if they targeted the gas chambers and crematoria. A US colonel is on record as saying, 'we are over there to win the war, and not to take care of refugees', while a British Foreign Office subordinate wrote, 'in my opinion, a disproportionate amount of time at the Office is wasted on dealing with these wailing Jews' - 'wailing Jews' whose only remains at Auschwitz were 368,820 men's suits, 836,255 women's coats and dresses, 44,000 pairs of shoes and 7.7 tons of human hair.
In his preface, Jones promises to 'tell it exactly as it was' - 'no exaggerations, no lies'. Facts like these need no embellishment.
Suzy Ceulan Hughes @ www.gwales.com