Jewish professors have now been dismissed from their posts at the university, but students have been allowed to remain. You have never been reluctant to identify yourself as a Jew, but you try to hide your Polish past. Eastern European Jews are being expelled from the Third Reich as quickly as possible.
Just before your graduation, you are called into the school's office and
told that you will not be allowed to finish. No Jews may become doctors,
you
are told. We cannot permit non-Aryan inferiors to treat Germans.
You are
heartbroken — all those years of serious, hard study now amount to nothing.
As you leave the building, a leading member of the Jewish community
meets you on the street. I know what just happened,
he says. It's a terrible
injustice. But I hope you will stay with us, here in Berlin. We need you. So
many Jews are being hurt by the SA that we need medical help — and no non-
Jewish doctors will treat us anymore. Although you are not yet a doctor, you
could be of real help.
If you choose to remain in Berlin, continue to page 9.
If you think that there is really no future for Jews in Germany, and you decide to leave continue to page 10.