Volume 1
March 29, 1990
When a thought or even a resolution
is made to pursue an activity, the hard thing is how to start it. It seems
to be easier not to start at the beginning but to go on, and then come
back to the beginning as an afterthought. People who write stories based
on factual matter or fictional matter have it easy. They start with a
date, the weather on that particular date, and use the opening as a propeller
for further developments. But, when you want to put down on paper yourself,
your own inner being or try to find a way to make it visible, problems
arise. I don't even know at this moment, whether I want to expose myself,
to bare my invisible self or maybe even attempt to come out with anything,
other than what I see in the mirror. I am just thinking. Maybe that by
itself is a start. Maybe? I shall let my hand wander and let's see what
will come out of it.
March 31, 1990
So I took a rest for a day. It might
have dampened my ardour. It might have given me a chance to reflect and
ponder. I don't know what else it might have done. Here I am at the desk
letting the pen scribble. The day is coming along and pretty fast too,
when I'll have to stand up before a public gathering and address that
gathering on the Holocaust. The idea of doing so is not an easy morsel
to swallow. I had occasions before when diverse groups of people wanted
me to address them on the same subject. At times it got me involved; at
others it made me shy away from it. I am not even sure myself to any degree
of certainty, why sometimes it was no and at others it was yes. It seems
to be the inner conflict that rages within me. Such matters as the Second
World War and the accompanying events and devastation, arouse conflicting
emotions and reactions. At times I feel like shutting up and let all happenings
be my very own. At other times I feel like shouting at the top of my voice,
the anger and curses that have taken home in my being. There are times
when I would let day to day events envelop me and shut the memories out.
However, it seems to be such a deeply felt traumatic experience, that
no matter what will transpire in times to come, it will always be either
on top or not far from it. I suppose we as a people or individually so,
are conditioned by history, recent or long past, to bear that history
within to a very prominent extent. Maybe other peoples feel similarly.
There should be people that belong in that category. The world is full
of violence and catastrophes. How they actually feel might be interesting
to know. I feel so many emotions that I can't even categorize them easily.
I shall try however to put them down on paper. I have to make an effort
on behalf of my commitment to address a gathering soon.
April 4, 1990
Yes, the thoughts and pertinent facts
about the Holocaust have to be assembled and made into an address. I have
always, up to now, managed, when occasions arose, to speak publicly without
a prepared speech. It worked, and generally there was some satisfaction
on my part of it. How others saw it is of course for others to say or
maybe not to say. This time, however, I feel a need to have it on paper.
So there is pressure of time on me. Here I may share with the pages of
paper and whoever might read them, some thoughts about the very painful
and yet so poignant matter. What is one to say to people who sit in front
of you, eager to hear your voice? Is one to roll out facts and numbers
and other data? Is it a matter of thoughts and ideas? Is it an analysis
of personal experiences, plus history? How does one convey what is bottled
up inside you? What does the audience expect? What do they want to hear?
It is not a religious ceremony, where ceremonial is mixed with articles
of belief and it repeats itself with frequency that the date or occasion
demands. It is for me , as far as I can fathom it, an outpouring of reminiscences,
anger and thoughts of the future plus analysis of the events. It is maybe
a combination of all those things and more. I shall pretty soon try to
collect my thoughts and put them on paper. A new attempt on my part to
write it, instead of just saying it verbatim.
April 4, 1990
It really was a strange era. Around
me, the world was getting ready for awful things. Signs of it permeated
in all directions. Sometimes they would frighten, sometimes they would
hold some secrets. It was ominous and yet on reflection, I remember being
possessed by expectations, beyond comprehensible criteria. Something was
brewing. Something was seething. Yet life was going on, as if tomorrow
would follow today, without a break in continuity and purpose. When it
came it looked so mild. Almost peaceful. In my mind I saw future events,
unfolding themselves somehow on the pattern of stories, of previous cataclysms.
Armies, aeroplanes, governments and all of us were getting into the dance
of events. We were drawn into the abyss of catastrophe, the scope of which
was beyond our imagination. Yes, I am talking and reminiscing of the beginning
of the Holocaust. It looked at first so innocent. Such outpouring as above
comes as an overflow of my attempt to concentrate on writing a speech.
I shall go to it, by the road of thought and inner argument. I shall try
to say what I feel and think.
May 6, 1992
An awfully long time has elapsed,
since I wrote down thoughts. Of course long is a relative thing. One has
to measure length by the way one feels. This does not at all touch upon
material consideration. To take a long time upon an assignment does not
signify the length one takes to express a thought, for thinking is timeless.
Lots has transpired. The world is moving very fast these days. Almost
no stopping anywhere. There is no time to reflect.
Just to complete what took place
since I wrote last. I spoke publicly to a large audience, gathered to
commemorate the Warsaw Ghetto uprising.
As an event I would describe it in
such a manner: A large crowd, tense atmosphere, emotions run high. I am
satisfied I spoke to the point. I felt within me that it made an impression.
Since then, i.e. 19/4/90 I spoke to many audiences. Both in Yiddish and
English. On the Holocaust and on other topics. But the speech described
above is very meaningful to me. It was an appearance that made me at one
with my past and my present.
May 7, 1992
Having resolved to continue writing
and actually having done it, makes me feel good.
The idea to write has been with me
for a while. Through contacts with a number of friends, from far and wide
and through prodding by my daughter, I got off to do it. The other day,
after I spoke to a group of students from a Brockville school, visiting
the Holocaust centre, someone asked me what impact the horrible tragedy
had on my life.
After all I am nearing my 68th birthday.
It's been a long time since it all took place. If one is to measure time,
then 365 days make up a year. The war lasted from start to end 5 1/2 years
and 6 weeks. As a near 68 year-old would count, it's less than an eleventh
of my life. After all there were many elevenths so far. However none left
an impact nearly close to those fateful years. The answer was, as it clearly
reflects my honest feeling and thoughts: the motto of my life since then.
Even when busy learning a trade and preoccupied with making a living,
the impressions of the past were always close to the surface.
My task of family building took away
a lot of my energies. It is no mean purpose. It's all encompassing. It
never stops.
And whilst going from stage to stage,
I was constantly aware and faced with reminiscences.
So, the answer to the question was:
that nothing is as durable and memorable as those awful years of being
a hunted being. Let me rush in here with an addendum. Besides those preoccupations,
I was and am still very active in social and political causes. It would
be very hard for me to do otherwise.
May 24, 1992
This time a severe cold and a slight
fever kept me away from the pen. Something else has happened to me too,
I got to be 68 years-old. It sounds not young. Yet I don't feel any difference
between last year and now. Maybe it all comes at once or in a particular
way.
Yesterday I visited with some old
friends of the family. The man, now 88 years old, claims to have welcomed
me home, when I was one week old. Not many people can say that. He has
fond memories of my parents. It makes me feel warm and sentimental towards
him and his ailing wife. Both are my friends for a long time. We met in
England in the late forties. What makes those visits so meaningful are
the recollections that both share with me. Unfortunately Mr. and Mrs.
R. Ryba are very sick now. She is almost incapable of hearing me. She
even has difficulty sometimes to identify me. How sad. I suppose that
is life.
I also visited Mr. D. Zand in the
Jewish General Hospital. He is very sick, but quite capable as far as
memory is concerned. Again it's very nostalgic. Mr. Zand remembers my
father and uncle Moishe Aron, from bygone days.
To talk to them is to transport yourself
to times long ago.
Almost to an other era. It might
even stimulate me to start remembering those days on paper. In this year
1992, when I look around me, I see very few people who could say, like
Mr. Ryba and Mr. Zand do: I spoke and participated with your parents in
causes of yonder years.
May 31, 1992
Well, it didn't take that long to
be confronted with another loss in the chain of background and history.
Looking by chance into the obituaries,
I saw the name of Mr. D. Zand.
His was the last name. It even carries
a certain significance for me. It may not be the last link to the parents
yet. But it's close enough. I saw him only 3 days before his death. A
little bit further removed from those direct reminiscences. How often
have I heard him relate, usually with a satisfactory gleam in his voice
and eyes, as to the contacts that he had with my uncle Moishe Aron, the
youngest of the brothers of my father and also of the pleasant memories
of my own father.
Yes, it seems that such encounters
between my father and people around him were not so rare.
I heard it before. Will I hear it
anymore?
I realize that my thoughts on this
topic bring forth questions: What kind of causes are they? What were the
ideals at play? Who were the players? Of course, such and related questions
stimulate me to write and expound. How else can I tell something of my
own world, from which I spring?
With all that is said and done, very
little remains visible of those far off days.
There were personalities inter-playing
their game of life and struggle.
There were many families that formed
the circle of my life.
I would like to have it on paper,
for all who care to see it, as well as to contemplate it myself.
June 26, 1992
Time has gone by again. What with
the visits here by my friends of olden days. They are from far away Australia.
I just saw them when I paid a visit to Melbourne this last winter. It
was all a sweet trip into the past and many friends to share it with.
Now two of those came back to see me here. It was tiring to be in attendance.
It was good and full of memories. Now they are gone back on their way
to Australia. Will I see them soon again? But my imagination sees them
now. Maybe I can recapture what I see with my eyes and put it on paper.
I am going to try.
June 21, 1992
Putting all those thoughts that crowd
into my mind into some sort of order is not easy.
Should it be my life as I remember
it up til now? Maybe isolated events? Maybe just let the pen write and
the hand that directs it will do a job? I know it has to be done. I will
use this entry as a start.
It happens to coincide with a planned
trip to England tomorrow. It also coincides with Fathers Day.
So let me just state that I have
started to replicate my life's experiences, on paper. Maybe there is going
to be some kind of semblance. To celebrate Fathers Day, my daughter invited
me to have lunch with her. I look forward to be in her company. I wish
that I could also have the company of my son and grandchildren. It would
be nice and comforting. But let me not indulge in too much wishful thinking.
I have a job to do.
I am for all intents and purposes
a child of my parents: FROIM FISZEL ZYLBERBERG and SURA RYWKA GOTLIB.
Born in Poland on May 13, 1924, I consider myself to be a Polish-Jewish
person.
It somehow has lots of meaning for
me, to say the above in a clear way.
Those days of the middle twenties,
were days of heavy expectations all around us.
I know of them now, since I heard
so much about it. I also knew and still know some people who shared those
experiences with my parents and my family. Those were the days when the
pain and suffering of the first world war were just beginning to fade
away gently. Maybe not so gently as crisis after crisis shook the fragile
structure of the newly independent Poland. For good measure, came a recession.
For even worse circumstance, deeply held prejudices against Jews and other
minorities, showed its ugliness.
It was also a period of great expectations.
The war that was supposed to be the
last one, had awakened the hope of that part of Europe and of course the
whole world, that tyranny and oppression, as was practiced before the
war, will be a thing of the past. The talk was of better and brighter
days. In my parents' home it was the fervent desire for a fair and just
society, with all being equal, that permeated the atmosphere. I know it,
because I heard of it. I read a lot about it. I also recall the people
that I saw from earliest childhood. I also remember references to celebrations
and meetings. I must have heard them when I was still crawling around
the flat. But I do know that I grew up amidst family and friends that
shared a strong belief in social justice for all. Especially for the doubly
oppressed Jewish people.
It was a time of great expectations.
I know that as Jews, my parents and their parents were subjected to discrimination
and often persecution. All the more reason to be eager to start off on
the long awaited road to equality and human dignity.
Dec 6, 1992
A half-years gap is a big affair.
Excuses there must be galore. But,
really, who needs them. It just happened, that life rolled along fairly
fast.
Now, it's time to carry on. Winter
is here. Grey clouds cover the sky. It looks like the greyness penetrates
to one's inner self. It also calls forth reflections and reminiscences.
After all, with all the things that marked my life so far, greyness has
been a frequent companion.
Not that there were not bright days.
They were there for sure. But scattered and I think that I ought to look
at them. So, all this calls for an effort to sit down and recall my story.
It would be hard to recall all that
took place. But I can try to see the grey and bright colours from the
perspective of time.
For a Sunday morning this is a good
resolve. Let's see if I can live up to it.
Jan 21, 1993
Miami. It's warm, humid and sometimes
very windy. It's better though than wintry Montreal. As a matter of fact,
it's more pleasant than negotiating one's way through slippery pavements.
So, I am trying to enjoy the balmy Florida and develop visible signs of
it. Of course, I mean tan colours and a holiday bearing. I don't know
how much I acquired so far. I have been here three weeks. I am sorry though
for my close ones, who cannot share it with me. An exception to this set
up, was my sister's visit. She managed to persuade her husband to let
her have a glimpse of Florida. It was most pleasant to see her at her
relaxed self. She certainly deserves such a treat. Unfortunately it was
only for a fortnight that she came. We both managed to see a lot of old
friends and acquaintances. Some of those encounters very highly emotional.
She saw here friends and distant relatives that she hadn't seen since
the war's end. Some even since before the war. For each case it was close
to half a century. What an encounter. She must surely have felt very elevated
and excited. I felt good for her. I also got emotional and sentimental.
All in all, it was some happening. A recurrent theme in all those highly
charged conversations was of course the war, the ghetto, camps and the
war's end. It can't be helped. It crops up almost imperceptibly, whenever
people meet. We, the generation of survivors of this most cruel war, can't
shake off its impact. Sometime I try to stay clear of conversations, where
details of horrible events are brought out. Consciously, I want to think
of the beauty of reunions. But it seems to be almost at skin level. One
has to rub hands or touch one's forehead. It springs forth. It envelops
you. It is probably stronger than we know. I think times are coming, when
I would want to pour out all that I walk around with. It seems like the
paths are leading that way.
Jan 23, 1993
Evening. It's a bit lonely. Lots
of people around, but somehow lonely. Maybe it's my own state of mind.
I had a chat with a friend of mine. I see him in London, England. He leaves
tomorrow. He spent here almost two weeks. I just thought of sending a
book as a present to my sister. She stayed on in London, while I looked
for new things in Montreal, Canada. My eyes fell upon a book called "The
Holocaust Lady". We almost at the same time uttered the same words.
It is not the right thing to give my sister another book about the Holocaust.
She, my sister, seems to live too much of her life around recollections
of the past, with her vivid memory she remembers so many details, that
frightens me. Maybe she can't help it. Maybe she feels the painful sensation
of remembering as a link with events gone by. Maybe she feels a sense
of guilt. Lots of maybes. But she seems to be transfixed with the past.
When confronted with recollections of others, I usually try to stay clear
of emotional participation. I don't want to be too involved in recalling
the past. My sister seems almost eager to talk. But, I think, that maybe
in a different way I also am doing what she is doing.
I think that for my children's and
grandchildren's personality developments, I ought to share my past. Up
until now, I only mentioned casually certain things. I think it's time
to call back events as I see them, with my eyes turned backwards.
Jan 24, 1993
Again an unexpected involvement in
Holocaust related happenings. My sister who just returned to London called
me up. She was offered to travel to Germany. There is going to be an anti-Nazi
rally, and she was asked to address that rally as a survivor. Her question
was pointedly straight forward: should she go there or not. After all
it's Germany. There are according to her estimates many Nazis in Germany
now. There are also quite a lot of older Nazis, who participated in the
war. They are there. The thought of it makes her shudder. My answer was
clear. I would go if asked by trustworthy people. I would accompany her,
if she chose to go. What she will do I don't know.
When I was 15 years old, the war
broke out. Somehow it seems odd to say it in such a nonchalant way. But
even then it was really an uneventful event. I remember the tingling sensation
that the war evoked in me. I had heard so much about the First World War,
that I thought to experience a war at close quarters was a real happening.
One was somehow more grown up, more a person of experience, having been
in a conflagration. A 15 year old wants always to be older and grown up.
Little did I realize then, that war means death at close quarters in one's
own vicinity. Very soon and the impact of the war was felt everywhere
around. Bombed cities, retreating army units, prisoners of war, confusion
and the building next door to our residence was hit by a powerful bomb.
Somehow war was a bloody spectacle. And yet it took much more than that,
to unveil the real horrors. It even didn't take too long at that.
June 21, 1993
Again a long delay in my accounting
narrative. As usual it's due to some travels and other related adventures.
No sooner did I step on Canadian soil again, than I went to Poland. The
immediate reason was the affixing of two commemorative plaques, on the
inner cemetery wall in Warsaw. The people thus commemorated were my parents
and the parents of my brother-in-law Stasiek. The other reason was the
50th anniversary of the outbreak of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising. Both events
were very poignant. Our personal commemoration was fraught with difficulties.
Several engraving errors and delays made things very tense and emotional.
When finally it took shape, there was and remains up until now, a missing
name of my fathers two first names. Somehow it means a lot. My father
was well known in the city of Lodz. He was best known by the name that
is not there.
The commemorative events for the
uprising were very strong and loud. The Polish government with the close
co-operation of the Israeli government, arranged for a great spectacle.
What with military parades, drum
beating, light effects and extensive media coverage, made us all feel
part of a show. I don't know how it was meant to be. In my opinion it
was crushingly strong. My own inner feelings of being there to witness
this event, were a mixture of importance and devastation. I can't see
the millions dead, amongst them my own closest family, relatives and friends
as having been really honoured. And yet it was a historical event. It
even produced a clash of Israeli survivors and Polish and other survivors
as to the mantle of leadership and recognition of their role in the uprising.
Another very poignant event was the dedication of a monument to the memory
of the national Jewish hero of the Holocaust, Shmuel Mordechai Zygelboim.
As a man of outstanding valour and dedication to the Jewish people, he
committed suicide in London in 1943 as a protest over the passivity of
the allied powers and, in no small measure, over the lukewarm involvement
of the Jewish leaders the world over in the efforts to alleviate and rescue
those Jewish people who had the misfortune of being under German occupation
in the Second World War. His deed then, in London, reverberated across
the world. It wasn't given that the supreme sacrifice under such dire
circumstances should evoke more responsive reaction. Zygelboim happened
to have been known to me through my Bundist affiliation. He was one of
the leaders of the pre-war Bundist movement in Poland. He resided in Lodz
before the war. I knew his youngest child, Artek, a schoolmate of my sister.
I also knew his daughter, Rivkah, a co-camper with me in the summer of
1937. I got to know his older son, Joseph, alive and residing in California.
All those contacts with the Zygelboim family, plus my own feelings of
awe towards the towering personality of S. M. Zygelboim, made me feel
both proud and honoured to stand there in Warsaw and participate in the
unveiling ceremony. It was meaningful. All told, the visit to Poland and
the bitter feeling of disappointment with the attitudes of large groups
of Polish people towards the remnants of the Jewish people of Polish background,
made my stay there a hard pill to swallow. The only alleviating event
was for my sister and me, the visit to our home town, Lodz. We both savoured
the bittersweet memories of our early youth. My sister who lives in London,
was my companion in Poland.
Maybe it was a relief, a well-deserved
one, to embark a few weeks after the return to London, on a trip to York,
England. My cousins in London were persuaded to do it with me. Their car
and attitude made it a very interesting trip. The city of York with its
ancient walls, cathedral and little twisted street, is a gem of history.
It's located in central England. It was always an administrative and commercial
centre. Its history dates back to pre-Roman times. The museums depicting
Roman and Viking cultures, are very instructive. Being a bit of a nut
for history, that was a real treat.
June 23, 1993
And so, back to Montreal. Back to
family, friends and activities. The trip to York left another impression
on me. Located in the middle of York City are the hill and ruins of the
castle where an infamous pogrom took place. The Jewish community of York
took shelter in Clifford's Tower. They were pursued there by a mob which
was incited by the local gentry. They were in debt to Jewish merchants.
To get rid of their obligations, they found excuses for the mob's hostility.
They were known to have been the quiet voices that made the siege so ominous
for the Jews hidden in the castle. Not trusting the mob, nor the gentry,
they committed an act of collective suicide in order to save themselves
the tortures and hideous death at the hands of their pursuers. It all
happened in 1190 C.E. It left an everlasting shame on the people of York
and England. Some people are trying to expiate for it now. It's a bit
late in the day. However, for those of us who remember such events from
history, it has much meaning. A note of poignancy. The driver of the tower
bus around the city did not fail to call those far off events the most
shameful chapter in the history of York.
June 24, 1993
Whether it's the season or my own
conjunctions, I only know that some such associations frequently present
themselves. I am thinking of the annual meeting of the Montreal Jewish
Library. As guest speaker at that meeting was a very charming young French
Canadian academic author. Her thesis and the developments following her
dissertation are of great concern to me. She, herself a pure-laine
French Canadian, if ever there was one, found it in her heart of hearts
to tackle an ugly and ominous aspect of public manifestation in Quebec.
She realized in her own words the
lunacy and ridiculousness of Jew-baiting. Her studies and meticulous searches
brought to light the pernicious work of many anti-Semitic and anti-democratic
forces in Quebec prior to the outbreak of World War Two. It was very meaningful,
her assertion that those groups who openly preached anti-everything that
is liberal, enlightened and progressive is treachery to the concept of
a pure French Canadian nation, also preached and implied that the Jews
are the personification of evil. Given the heavy anti-Semitic climate
at that time in Europe and many places around the world, this nest of
evil in our own country was and could have been an instrument of vicious
anti-Jewish action. Again, her theme of anti-Semitism and its ugliness
props up. A shameful chapter in human development. Maybe it's time to
start recalling events of more than 50 years ago. They seem to be crowding
into my memory.
The times of a young person, age
15, is full of wonders, discovery and expectations. The events that were
then unfolding were a culmination of at least a good number of years of
my life. As a schoolboy, I experienced many instances of overt and covert
animosity from Polish boys and adults. Sometimes more from children than
grown ups. Sometimes the reverse. The consciousness of its existence was
a constant companion. My school years that lasted until 1938 were a period
that knew about harassment. We, that is the immediate family and relatives,
were scattered in many Polish and foreign lands. Thoughts of leaving Poland
for pleasanter places, were often brought up at the dinner table. There
was a noisy and pointed attempt by the then Polish government to tighten
the chances of a useful life for the Jews of Poland. It took various forms.
Economic boycott, anti-Jewish legislation, restrictions in admitting Jews
to schools of higher learning, besides a covert action to make Jews feel
insecure. Our talks were full of recounting ongoing events. Besides the
real life contact with neighbours and other people of the same street
and places around us, we also had the news from abroad, crowd in on us.
The general atmosphere was loaded with apprehension. And yet we were looking
forward to better days. We were the proverbial optimists.
June 25, 1993
I don't know why I am sitting here
and recounting events of a very dark age. It almost seems an anachronism.
Outside is a bright day. The sun does its best to shine and cheer up.
Am I going against life's vital forces by trying to dig up from the memory
bank, half-forgotten reminiscences? Not an easy task to answer such a
question. The answer might be summed up in an injunction issued to all
of us survivors of the holocaust: Don't forget and don't forgive.
Just as we were placed so many years
ago on a plank from which to fight back an overwhelming flood of hate
and zoological anti-Semitic cravings, so we are today still on that plank.
Now we are duty and conscience bound to fight back the natural desires
to forget. In spite of all the beauty nature can provide and its great
lure, we are trying to bring out our epic-saga of the flood that almost
wiped us all out. So let the sun shine. Let life continue on its eternal
sojourn. Maybe with our input of reminiscences, those forces that brought
about our woes will not be capable of doing it again. Maybe.
So the eventful year of 1939 rolled
along. My brother, who was a very capable and intelligent young man, didn't
manage to pursue any career. He was denied entry into high school. Mainly
because of anti-Semitic policies. But also because of poverty. There were
not too many avenues for a young Jewish boy of 17-18 those days. My own
road to young adulthood was directed by the heavy atmosphere of his fate.
I asked for and followed a path that in those days was almost natural
and certainly obvious to my understanding of the situation. I went to
work as an apprentice to a textile mill. I thought that maybe I could
help my brother. He was a real intellectually inclined fellow. With schooling
he probably would have gone places. In the meantime, he worked as an assistant
to a newspaper administrator. Hardly a promising position. On top of it
all it was part-time and for a secular minded youth, to work for an ultra
Orthodox newspaper was a very unsatisfactory situation. For lack of anything
more meaningful, this was the situation and his poor lot.
June 27, 1993
My sister and I were still doing
things partly as though the world around us carried on in a normal way.
I went to a summer camp in 1939. So did my sister. It wasn't the same
camp. I was a member of the "SKIF". That was the children's
organization of the Socialist Bund. Esther went to a summer colony run
by the T.O.Z. (an agency devoted to the health of the young). Oblivious
to all around us, we each had a good summer in this last year of peaceful
bliss. Events around were proceeding with accelerated speed. Czechoslovakia
was being dismembered, Western Europe was getting the jitters. We were
informed as to what went on. And yet we didn't believe it was for real.
We didn't think it was the foreplay for our own lot.
So, when I came back from summer
camp, just about a few days before the end of August 1939, the air in
Lodz was charged with electrical currents. It was the same as I left it,
and yet it applied only to its physical shape. It was what one would call
ominous. I went back to the factory that I was apprenticed to, that also
happened to be the place where my father worked. We actually did go to
work on Friday Sep 1, 1939. Everybody went through the motions of working.
Lots of men were digging trenches for shelters. These were supposed to
have served as protection when an air attack would come. It was for me
the last day of work in the factory owned by Herszenberg and Halberstat.
It was a very large establishment. It was manned by a mixture of Jews,
Germans and Poles. My career as an apprentice to the designer of textiles
came to an abrupt end. So also came an end to my childhood and early youth.
Never again did I feel or act in a similar manner. As soon as the sirens
went off, so did my happy, blissful years come to an end.
The next couple of days of constant
wailing of sirens and nervousness produced the first act of the war. It
was both an exciting time and a time loaded with foreboding. New regulations
went into action. We had to take cover when an air alarm sounded. Horses,
which were still then the very popular means of transportation, although
not the only one, were to be unhitched and tied up to their vehicles.
All kinds of rumours started circulating, about the progress of the war
started on the 1st September, 1939. There were optimistic reports, given
through the Polish radio. There were people who could understand German.
They spoke of boastings of a general offensive on all fronts. Already
on the third day of the war, bombs started coming down on Lodz. Not too
many but those that came down on our city were scattered in different
locations.
June 28, 1993
Our residence which was next house
to a not long erected factory of sausages was not very lucky. The bombs
that fell from the skies were comparatively few. Probably, the reason
being that Lodz, the largest industrial city of Poland, was too valuable
to be destroyed. The textile industry had its biggest concerns in Lodz.
These are afterthoughts. The fact remains that not too many buildings
came down. Our next door factory, however, wasn't spared. Since we were
all very much taken with the spirit of defending ourselves, we participated
actively in building trenches which were supposed to have been covered
up to form a shelter. During a bombing attack on the third day of the
war, we were ushered into the open trench in the garden plot, adjoining
the wall of the factory building.
And it happened. The whole world
seemed to explode around.
It got dark, although it was only
the afternoon. I just remember being thrown around. Without thinking as
I recall now, I darted out into the garden. From there I made my way to
the street and continued to run in the direction towards open spaces,
which abounded in my neighbourhood. Some people who took shelter in a
house pulled me inside. They yelled at me not to go in the direction that
I did just a minute ago. That was the location of anti-aircraft guns.
There the bombs kept on coming down constantly. Totally shaken with wounds
on my head, I somehow calmed down a bit. My father, who just wasn't in
the trench with us, because he was locking up the flat, ran down towards
the garden. Finding pandemonium all around, he couldn't spot me anywhere.
Some people said that they saw me split seconds before the impact. Others
were actually saying that they think, that I am under the ruins of the
brick wall which crumbled upon us. Others still thought that they saw
me darting away in the direction of the fields. Not being able to find
me under the rubble, he started running in the direction where I was.
Of course he found me. What a traumatic experience. That event, and subsequent
events that followed closely the one I described here, gave my psyche
an irreversible jolt. No more did the war seem to be exciting. It put
the fear of the oncoming apocalypse into sharp relief. So much for the
beginning of a long, tragedy-laden period. It abruptly put an end to childhood,
laughter and play.