To survive in Auschwitz you needed a good inside job. Blue-eyed Artur Radvanski, of Prague, was lucky. He was chief of the doctors' bathroom in the SS hospital in Auschwitz. He was only 17 and had already survived Buchenwald, Ravensbruck, and Sachsenhausen. He cleaned the bathrooms and massaged the doctors, including Josef Mengele. "I was not a person, I was a thing to him, a dog, cat, pig," Artur said of Mengele. "To him I was not a man."