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Franceska Mann, was a Polish ballerina who was 26 at the time, arrived at Auschwitz extermination camp that day on a transport of 1,800 so-called VIP prisoners from Bergen-Belsen in Germany, who had been lured into thinking they were en route to freedom as part of an exchange for German POWs ostensibly organised by the Allies. The Germans promised that Auschwitz was merely a stop on the way to Switzerland, but the women among the group soon found… themselves being led to the gas chambers.Mann undressed slowly, using seductive dance movements. First she lifted her skirt. Then she removed her blouse, and leaned against a pole to remove her high heels. The SS soldiers standing across from her didn’t know how to react. Mann exploited their confusion, took off one shoe and threw it hard at one of them, the soldier began to bleed and collapsed. Mann jumped on him, stole his weapon, and shot him to death. Minutes later she was shot in the head.
Thomas Dellert is an internationally renowned Swedish painter and photographer who has taken part in numerous solo exhibitions throughout the United States and several European nations. His works are featured in the permanent collections of the Holocaust Memorial Museum (Washington DC), Heinz, Mercedes Benz, Absolute Vodka and the Swedish Royal Family, to name a few. Combining satirical and historical elements, Dellert mixes painting, collage and graphic art to convey both the deep darkness and shining hope of humanity.