The question now arises, what could, or should, have constituted this “inner hold”?
Former prisoners, when writing or relating their experiences, agree that
the most depressing influence of all was that a prisoner could not know how long his term of imprisonment would be.
He had been given no date for his release. (In our camp it was pointless even to talk about it.)
Actually a prison term was not only uncertain but unlimited.
A well-known research psychologist has pointed out that life in a concentration camp could be called a “provisional existence.”
We can add to this by defining it as a “provisional existence of unknown limit.”
New arrivals usually knew nothing about the conditions at a camp.
Those who had come back from other camps were obliged to keep silent, and from some camps no one had returned.
On entering camp a change took place in the minds of the men.
With the end of uncertainty there came the uncertainty of the end.
It was impossible to foresee whether or when, if at all, this form of existence would end.
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