Survival in Auschwitz

by

Primo Levi

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Oppression, Power, and Cruelty 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.
Oppression, Power, and Cruelty Theme Icon

As many thinkers have observed, power has the tendency to corrupt any individual, but Levi, the author and a former prisoner at Auschwitz labor camp, notes that this seems even more true when that individual has known what it is like to be powerless. At Auschwitz, some Jewish prisoners are promoted to the status of Kapos, who have authority over the other prisoners and receive special privileges. In his account, the relationships between the Jewish Kapos and their underlings demonstrates the effect that power and one’s position in an oppressive relationship has on one’s psyche, most often breeding cruelty and selfishness.

The Jewish Kapos, elevated to a position of power above their fellow Jewish prisoners, become more tyrannical than even the Germans, demonstrating the manner in which power corrupts and breeds cruelty. Although it would seem that accepting power granted by the Nazis over one’s fellow Jewish prisoners would be an untenable betrayal, Levi notes that “there will certainly be someone who will accept,” since “he will be withdrawn from the common law and will be untouchable,” demonstrating how the enticement of power can lead people to join their oppressors and betray their own comrades and countrymen to alleviate their own suffering. However, the Jewish prisoners instinctively fear a Jewish Kapo, knowing that he will be as cruel as he possibly can be, since “if he is not sufficiently so, someone else, judged more suitable, will take over his post.” This is underscored when Levi is relieved to be transferred to a non-Jewish Kapo’s Kommando, since he knows that “he is not a Kapo who makes trouble, for he is not a Jew and so has no fear of losing his post.” The tyranny of Jewish Kapos against their own brethren powerfully demonstrates how power can corrupt, especially when offered to one who was formerly powerless. Although the Jewish Kapos are hated by the other Jewish prisoners, Levi recognizes that some of their cruelty is also born of their own pain: “[The Kapo’s] capacity for hatred, unfulfilled in the direction of the [Nazis], will double back, beyond all reason, on the oppressed; and he will only be satisfied when he has unloaded on to his underlings the injury received from above.” This further suggests that such power is especially corrupting to those who have been denied power and justice in the past, making them even more cruel in an effort to compensate for their own pain.

Although the Jewish underlings have no power of their own, they, too, become most often cruel and selfish toward each other, suggesting that such great suffering fragments even the oppressed, rather than creating solidarity amongst them. Although, as Levi recognizes, there is an expectation that the oppressed will “unite, if not in resistance, at least in suffering,” he does not witness this himself, stating instead that “a position of rivalry and hatred among the subjected has been brought about.” Rather than binding together in a fight for their mutual survival, the Jewish prisoners “pursue [their] own ends by all possible means.” This is particularly evident in the 10 days after the Germans have abandoned Auschwitz, leaving the sick and invalids to fend for themselves. Levi witnesses former prisoners eagerly waiting for their fellow inmates to die of illness so they might take their food without struggle. As much as the Jewish prisoners fear and detest their German captors, they seem to hate the Kapos just as much, since they have betrayed their comrades and become cruel and violent to lessen their own suffering. However, as Levi recognizes, it seems that most would take such an opportunity given the chance, since their oppression has made them selfish and cruel for the sake of survival. This again suggests that such severe oppression fragments the sufferers, setting them against each other more than their oppressor, against whom they are powerless to contend.

The mutual ruin and fostering of cruelty in both the oppressor and the oppressed suggest that, as Levi observes, no one emerges uncorrupted or untouched from such a wicked, oppressive environment or the contest for power that it creates. Oppression and the imbalance of power, it seems, inevitably breed cruelty and selfishness.

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Oppression, Power, and Cruelty Quotes in Survival in Auschwitz

Below you will find the important quotes in Survival in Auschwitz related to the theme of Oppression, Power, and Cruelty.
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 10. Chemical Examination Quotes

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

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:
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: