The film was written by Jakubowska and Gerda Schneider, also an Auschwitz survivor. Jakubowska initially thought about creating a film documenting her experience at Auschwitz while she was still an inmate at the camp: "The decision to make a film about Auschwitz originated as soon as I crossed the camp's gate." Upon her release from the camp she immediately began to work on a script and had completed a first draft by December 1945. As a survivor, she felt it was her duty and as a director to bear witness and register the magnitude of evil. In 1946 she travelled to
Moscow with a filmic novella of the script translated into Russian and met with
Mikhail Kalatozov, who was then responsible for
Soviet cinema. Deeply moved, Kalatozov passed on the novella to
Andrei Zhdanov. Zhdanov was deeply affected and sent the novella to
Joseph Stalin. Stalin's personal approval and the Soviet blessing made it possible for Jakubowska to make the film.
Film Polski still required script revisions and sought input from writers, outsiders, political activists and former Auschwitz inmates. The film is both set and filmed at Auschwitz and it was made with the participation of local inhabitants of
Oświęcim,
Red Army personnel and German prisoners of war as extras. Several of the actresses were former inmates of the camp themselves. Jerzy Kawalerowicz, an assistant director on the film said that these women "were wiser than all assistant directors; they knew everything from experience. They saw it. Those former inmates were returning to their places." Czeslaw Piaskowski, the co-set designer, was also a concentration camp survivor. Jakubowska restored part of the camp for filming and the film crew stayed in the former
SS quarters, with Jakubowska staying at the former home of
Rudolf Höss. ==Cast==