Ten Years Later
June 4, 1957
Erev Shavuot
The day is almost over, I have to
light the Yahrzeit candles, as well as the candles for this lovely
holiday, Shavuot, which begins soon. It's supposed to be a joyful
holiday for us Jews, but for me, for us, it will always represent sorrow
and remembrance of the days of anguish and murder of the innocent.
It was exactly fourteen years ago
that my loved ones spent the last days of their lives, although they didn't
know it at the time, of course, in the ghetto of Ungvar.
I am overwhelmed by bitterness and
anger once again, as the degradation and the inhuman treatment we all
suffered come back to haunt me once more. Time has no meaning in memory
and so I recall vividly my darling "Apuka," weak after a recent
operation, dragging his feet and bending his weary back under the heavy
load he carried (all his earthy belongings), one broken man in a long
row of many stepping into the line of the condemned, his last trip, leading
to the crematoria of Auschwitz. I remember my mother, always rebellious,
now silently carrying as much as her strength allowed her to. And myself?
In one arm I held Lidlid, on my shoulders a carry-all bag for baby, and
my back burdened with another rucksack for eventualities, a long, long
line ahead of me ... people, humanity, all Jews as far as my eyes could
reach, from the ghetto to the train station, marching, or rather dragging
themselves, to their awful destination.
Shavuot can never become a joyous
holiday for me. The memories of this day are far too painful, they can
never be erased from my thoughts.
Yet I am happy with Paul, as we try
to build a new life on the ashes of the old one. Next month, we will move
(with the Almighty's help) to our newly purchased house at 2442 Brinton
Road, a recently built duplex, all new, fresh, enjoyable. We have two
lovely children and many new possessions, just as any girls would have
who came from a well-to-do family. That was Paul's wish: to give his family
the best available all the time. And to achieve such affluence, he works
day and night. What persistence!
His 40th birthday is approaching.
He's still unbelievably active, and joyfully so, in our bedroom too.
Joyce is smart, intelligent, and
has a good memory. She knows what she wants and is demanding. But she
is also cuddly and sweet. She speaks English and Hungarian quiet fluently.
Sonny, on the other hand, speaks
only Hungarian and that in baby language. He is simply adorable.
I watch them at play, getting dirty
and uncontrollable. Then, once they are bathed and freshly dressed for
bed, they kiss the mezuzzah and lie down. Their little bodies relax,
and a pinkish colour suffuses their freshly scrubbed faces; they look
angelic and utterly beautiful. I can hardly take my eyes off them. G-d
has blessed me with these two precious angels, giving me a unique responsibility
to raise them as good human beings and above all, good Jews.
And Paul is such an excellent husband!
I feel so contented and happy. Thank you, G-d!
To me life is centered around the
children and through them the continuity. For Paul, all is business. He
works faithfully and tirelessly sixteen hours.
......................
Of course, he didn't like it. "I
earn enough to support you and the kids, it's degrading for me that my
wife should work away from the house." "What about me,"
I said, "don't I have feelings? I am your prisoner and maid and you
like that?" "No, you are my children's mother and my wife. Please
don't rebel! I only work for you--can't you see that? I'll tell you what.
Open charge accounts in any department store, buy yourself what you want.
Is that O.K.?" But he carefully checks every statement and inquires
what every item is for! At times I've raised my voice and he's become
verbally abusive, but he couldn't bear having misunderstandings between
us, so he apologized, or brought me roses to make up, and life continued
as before the storm, for I always forgive him.
Ste-Agathe, July 20,
1959
We spent three weeks at Mrs. Kahn's
hotel and Paul is extremely pleased with us. We gained suntans and weight,
and we're relaxed and happy. Why not? We were taken good care of, it was
a marvelous vacation. Finally I caught up with some reading, too. I can't
put down Exodus by Leon Uris. My mind is back in Bergen-Belsen,
it's April 15, 1945. As an inmate I knew only a small part of the camp.
According to Uris: "Camp Number One was an enclosure of four hundred
yards wide by a mile long. That area held 80,000 people, mostly Hungarians
and Polish Jews. The ration for Camp No. 1 was 10,000 loaves of bread
a week. Our census showed thirty thousand dead in camp number one, including
nearly fifteen thousand corpses just littered around. There were twenty-eight
thousands women and twelve thousand men alive."
I was one of those people, staggering
from hunger and thirst, after a bout of typhoid fever. I can still vividly
recall Dr. Klein ordering us to the main parade place. But it was not
an appel as we had expected. For by then most of us were either
dying or too sick to stand on our feet anyway. We expected some punishment
or even a "death sentence" from the notorious lager killer.
Instead of shouting at us, as we had grown accustomed to being treated,
he smiled and spoke to us as "equals": "Do not be afraid,
I am on your side, you see I always liked the Jews, and if I ever was
strict with you (my G-d, killing mercilessly, without reason, he calls
"being strict"!) I did it for one reason only. I had to obey
orders, but from now on I want to be lenient with you, good to you and
help you in every way. I realize that you haven't seen food or water for
two weeks, but all this will be changed from now on, I will see to it!
I promise you!"
Was I dreaming? No! Dr. Klein, our
camp commandant, knew better than we did, that the date was April 13th
and the Allied soldiers were approaching the camps. He finished his famous
speech with, "I'll be on your side and you on mine!" Did he
really believe that we, the handful of survivors, would save him from
the gallows? That night and the next night we heard artillery fire, although
we couldn't tell how far away it was. Early in the morning of April 15th,
we could hear tanks approaching. It sounded as if a whole army was on
the move. We ran to the gates. They were open. The Germans were about
to flee. Those of us who had the strength, threw stones at them, or cursed
them. Our curses had no effect on them! Some women were shouting and dancing
with joy--when they grasped the meaning of "open gates." I started
to cry bitterly. My heart was gripped with terrible pain as I realized
that I couldn't fool myself any longer. At last I knew that we were being
liberated, but that there would be no one on the outside to meet us. I
knew then without any doubt that my Lulu was dead; I didn't need anyone
to spell it out for me. I looked around me: the corpses were piled up
one on top of the other at least a meter high and in such a long row that
there seemed to be no end to it. The stench was unbearable, and it certainly
didn't help any to know that many of those bodies (now half-rotten) were
once close friends of mine, relatives and neighbours from my home town.
The first soldiers who entered the
camp became sick from what they saw, from the horrible stench and the
utter human destruction around them. They grew pale and vomited on the
spot.
This is what Leon Uris writes: "We
made desperate efforts, but the survivors were so emaciated and diseased
that thirteen thousand more died within a few days after our arrival!"
As for me, I can still recall passing
by a big kettle where some inmates were preparing a meal. The water was
boiling, there were pieces of meat in it. I turned around. "Want
to join us?" asked one woman. She ladled out a piece and offered
it to me. "Oh no, oh no, how could you?!" I screamed. "How
can you eat human flesh?" I can still hear her demented laughter.
Uris: "Conditions were so wretched
when we entered the camp that the living were eating the flesh of the
corpses!"
When the English soldiers who liberated
our camp could finally grasp this ugly reality, they covered the corpses
with white sheets, until trucks arrived to carry them away. New camps
had been built to accommodate the sick ones, and those with typhus and
tuberculosis were separated. The old camp was burned down. English ladies
and Red Cross nurses arrived to help us out in our new struggle: to survive.
They knew nothing about the horrors of the old camp, and our true stories
seemed like "hallucinations" to them.
Many refugees left the camps every
day, but I stayed on to help those less fortunate than myself.
P.S. We later learned that Dr. Klein
had tried to flee, but he was caught. He was sentenced to death at the
Nuremberg Trials.