- George Savar: I was sleeping on the floor, I don't know for how many days and when it woke me, I got scared. I thought it was one of the camp soldiers. The SS all knew the war was ending and they tried to eliminate as many jews as they could. But there was something different about this man standing over me. I could see it in his eyes and his uniform. He was an american. So young. I could tell the sight of me was too much. I was, oh maybe 80 pounds but this man, he was careful not to look as horrified as I'm sure he was. He wanted me to walk out with him but my legs wouldn't move. I was too weak so he carried me out of the barracks and he gave me his jacket, something to eat. A Hershey bar. I took one bite and that was all my empty stomach could handle. But nothing has ever tasted better. His goodness put back a little of the faith I had lost. My grandchildren put back the rest.
- Interviewer: What was his name?
- George Savar: Taylor. Private McKenna Boyd Taylor.
- Dr. Sheldon Hawkes: I know this is going to sound crazy, but I think all of this happened for a reason, okay? Elgers surfacing today as a witness, today of all days, and my plane getting delayed, and you and I going to question him together. Now maybe this is my uncle Frank testing me to see if I learned something from him. My uncle was in Memphis the day Dr. King was assassinated. Couldn't have been more than ten years old. And his whole life, he was on the front lines of racism, and he never let it intimidate him.
- Detective Mac Taylor: [yelling] Do you have something to say?
- Abraham Klein: [smiles at one way glass] Wir hätten sie alle töten sollen
- Aaron Lesnick: We should have killed them all