Foreword
Even though Anna knew that she could very well have been spared death by execution, she continued to live in the fear of imminent demise at the hands of her Nazi captors.
Not only did Anna live in mortal fear for her own life. She also constantly feared for the lives of her parents, who remained behind at the concentration camp that Anna had been removed from. As much as she had hated the camp, Anna was at least thankful that she had been near her parents.
The reason for the beautiful Jewish girl having been taken from the camp by Nazi soldiers was part of a program to satisfy the sensual needs of the German officers, a program that had been undertaken by Hitler and the Nazi high command. The Nazi high command felt that it was imperative for select personnel in key positions to be entertained with beautiful women when they were away from the battle fronts of World War Two.
With this basic objective in mind, Anna along with other girls had been removed from concentration camps to service the needs of Nazi soldiers. They were told that if any complaints were received from any of the soldiers concerning any form of dissatisfaction toward the girls that they would be immediately killed. In short, Anna was told to perform sexually with total and blind obedience.
The dark-haired beauty was sent to a luxury hotel in the German resort city of Baden-Baden, where she was expected to charm any and all Nazi officers toward whom she was told to shower her affections.
After arriving in Baden-Baden, Anna's life was thrown into a turbulent, topsy-turvy world in which she was uncertain from one moment to the next just where she stood in life.
-The Publisher
