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43 pages 1 hour read

Tadeusz Borowski

This Way for the Gas, Ladies and Gentlemen

Fiction | Short Story Collection | Adult | Published in 1946

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Story 7: “The Supper”

Story 7 Summary: “The Supper”

It’s a cold, rainy evening and the men in the camp are starving. They have been waiting all day for soup, which is waiting for them at the barracks. The Kommandant has lined up 20 Russian soldiers in their striped camp uniforms. Tadek and his fellow inmates watch as the Kommandant declares that the men are criminals, Communists that must be punished. Tadek notes how groomed and well-dressed the Kommandant and other Nazi soldiers are compared to the inmates. The Kommandant declares that there will be no dinner for anyone in the camp and orders the Block Elders to bring the cauldrons of soup back to the kitchen, threatening, “If even one cup is missing, you’ll have to answer to me” (154). The Kommandant orders the S.S. soldiers to execute the Russians. They fire and the Russians fall. The Kommandant drives away, and the gathered crowd of prisoners converges on the bodies until they are dispersed. Tadek stands back but describes how the following day, a Jewish inmate tries to persuade him “that human brains are, in fact, so tender you can eat them absolutely raw” (156). 

Story 7 Analysis

“The Supper” is about the desperation of starving men who resort to cannibalism. Borowski frequently mentions how the inmates must compromise themselves to survive. For Tadek, this happens in the first story when he must help with the brutal unloading of the freight trains. Those who work at the crematorium must endlessly kill and burn innocent people. The trauma and the assault of the camp goes far beyond deprivation and death. Inmates are forced to do terrible things to survive and often those things aren’t enough to save their lives. When the Kommandant declares that none of the inmates will receive dinner, they are already barely allotted enough to keep themselves alive. Driving them to cannibalism is another way of dehumanizing the people in the camp, forcing them to enact inhuman behavior. The story demonstrates the power of a person’s will to live and how socially ingrained morals and ethics can become a luxury.

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