Volume 2
June 29, 1993
A new chapter is opened up, somewhere
in the life of the world and my life too. I am going to try to bring out
impressions and feelings of yonder years. A bit late in the day, but maybe
not too late. With the progression of the Second World War, life just
flip-flopped completely. No more regulated behavioural patterns. No family
cohesions. No knowledge of a possible source of income. No laws to govern
civic life. Blurring of the distinction between criminal and normal behaviour.
Just about everything with which people measured events and deeds ceased
to operate, as was understood up until the first week in September 1939.
What a revolution in one's psyche. Not having anymore the regulated way
of understanding life around, we relapsed into an almost petrified state
of stupor. Only old established norms in one's own narrow circles still
had a certain sway. These above elaborated points started functioning
only days after the war started. Like night would superimpose itself on
the firmament of time.
Of course it didn't all happen in
one fell swoop. It took time. But remarkably little time. Within a few
weeks, nobody knew where what was. It was just a time of chaos: like the
proverbial Tohu-Vohu of the Bible. We had to adapt to an unknown
future. We were bewildered and forlorn. Events started taking place one
after another. Quite swiftly too.
June 30, 1993
I feel an elevation for having come
around that far. I also feel a tinge of some inner reaction. There is
a consciousness of movement. Some historical events are crawling out of
the past. History is re-living itself. I am becoming merged into the yesteryear
and the place that I am now inhabiting. I'll try to be as true to the
facts as they are coming into view.
As soon as the shock of being almost
in direct line of the trajectory of the large bomb that fell next door
receded, I became aware that tremendous events were unfolding. The reports
on the radio were mentioning names of places fairly deep inside Polish
territory. Battles were raging. Some localities were detailed for special
attention. They happened to be close to Lodz. The air of approaching calamity
hung low over our city.
In the midst of all this foreboding,
news came through of the nature of our own narrow escape. The factory
next door, a sausage manufacturing plant, was a very visible target for
the German bombers. They had a large basement. I suppose it served as
a storage capacity. As the alarm sounded, all the workers and the inhabitants
of the building adjoining the plant, ran for shelter to the basement.
Some passers-by also tried to use that shelter. Some managed to get in.
The owners of the plant were however very vigilant anti-Semites. They
refused entry to the Jewish passers-by. Those that were not allowed in
ran to other houses. There is no implied justice or otherwise. But the
truth is, that those inside perished and what happened to the ones that
had to find shelter elsewhere is not known to me. I still hope that they
survived.
The early-on event of the Second
World War left me with a scar on my head. I don't know whether it affected
me of not. I don't feel physically any inconvenience because of it now.
As this Sunday was followed by a
quiet Monday, so the bomb events took the comparative quiet of the following
day to get as the saying goes: acclimatized to life. But the Tuesday already
signalled a new situation. The bomb fell on Sunday the 3rd of September
1939. On Tuesday the 5th, units of the Polish army started rumbling through
Lodz. Where we lived was one of the main routes to Warsaw. All the soldiers
accosted by the adults and youngsters were indicating that the whole army
is in retreat. What started as a small number of units of all kinds became,
as the day wore on, a mass withdrawal. The army was going to defend Warsaw.
We felt like in the middle of a war operation.
July 1, 1993
What somehow was a night with ominous
overtones turned into an anxiety ridden period. My recollections of that
night are a little vague. I only know that when I woke up, I found my
father and brother missing. They had, by my mother's account, gone with
the retreating soldiers. The story as related took place in the following
order: there was a call on the radio for all men of arms-bearing age to
follow the army. The implication being that there is going to be another
front, set up to defend Warsaw. Also, it was given to understand that
those who were not going to go with the retreating army might be impressed
into the German war machine. By the time I became aware as to the night's
events, I was left the only male in the household. The nervous tension
was rising to a pitch. Neighbours were exchanging news as to the men of
the neighbourhood. In the meantime, the army kept rumbling through the
roads leading to Brzeziny and on to Warsaw. Even today, I still see an
epochal picture before my eyes. Soldiers on foot, soldiers on horse-drawn
vehicles, wounded soldiers, provisions, prisoners of war, officers on
horses, officers on the few motor vehicles and motor bikes, artillery
pieces, horse-drawn cavalry units and single straggling conscripts who
didn't know their unit's whereabouts. Now and again some low-flying fighter
planes were strafing anybody that was on the road. The road was just in
front of our house. One could almost see it now, with the hindsight of
54 years ago, as a grand review platform. Before our panic-stricken eyes,
an army was running. That was the same army who used to be glorified in
our school. In those days leading to the war, we were forever told by
the colonels and generals who were also the leaders of our government,
that the heroic Polish armed forces will stand guard on our frontiers.
We believed them. Maybe not all the people believed it. We were all, however,
looking up to our defence forces as our protectors and guardians.
All through Wednesday and Thursday
did the street outside our house resemble an army post. There must have
been many tens of thousands men on their way to north east. Lodz took
on an air of eeriness.
Now and again one heard already stories
of returned men and young men. Their story was of hellish things. They
told of German units being ahead of them. They barely managed to get back
home. Others spoke of merciless bombings on the highways. On Thursday,
towards the evening, news came by word of mouth, that a people's militia
has been formed to guard the civil life of the city. We didn't know who
was in charge at the top. We started then to follow an old custom of trying
to be on good terms with the oncoming authorities. Although there were
still scattered soldiers making their way out of the city, we were already
being conditioned to accept a new reality. And a new reality it certainly
was.
July 2, 1993
So, the infamous Friday rolled around.
There were no more bombings. An ominous calm descended on the city. Even
rumours didn't circulate in the morning. It's strange to be in a place
that stood still. That sort of calm lasted until noon. Because there were
telephones at such places as pharmacies and wealthier people, too, had
them, news travelled ahead of the incoming Germans. All of a sudden everybody
in the street and in the courtyard knew to relate the news. At about 2
p.m. the first patrols would be in the city centre. They would be coming
from the north west. The family: i.e. my mother, sister, and I, hurriedly
made our way to my uncle's residence in the middle of the city. We wanted
to be together with auntie and the young cousin. It seemed to have been
an impulse. Somehow closely related people want to share their closeness.
They were the closest relatives that we had in Lodz. As we came to the
city centre, so the first outriders on motorcycles came into view. They
just looked like ordinary men. Their uniforms were different. They almost
looked like regular beings. What got stuck in my memory was the applause
that erupted upon their arrival. Nobody could tell exactly who were those
jubilant people. It didn't take a long time to realize that these were
the much-vaunted Volksdeutsche. Of course we knew of their existence
before the war. They were not hiding their ethnicity. They only made us
all believe that they are loyal citizens of the Polish state.
So, we had a ready-made occupation
machine. At the time that we saw the German patrols come in, my mother
remarked that they, the Germans, are a tough lot. She remembered them
from the First World War. According to mother, they were strict but reasonably
observant of the law and could even be fair at times. Such impressions
were held by a lot of people of mother's generation. It was soothing to
hear her talk thus. We stayed at auntie's over the week-end. No word was
coming as to the fate of the men-folk. Uncle had also joined the rush
on Wednesday early morning. He came to us and together with father and
brother, made their way out of Lodz. Provisions were becoming scarce,
long lines formed outside of bakeries and groceries. There was never a
shortage of food in my memory. It was sometimes hard to make out before
the war. Unemployment and restrictive practices by the pre-war reactionary
government, made the economic picture gloomy. But we always knew that
Poland had an abundance of food. It was supplying lots of its produce
to other countries. So, what happened all of a sudden?
July 3, 1993
The very question as to the shortage
of food, just when the harvest was already in and there was a very pleasant
Indian summer, somehow became an ominous manifestation. Endless queues
for essentials. Just as the occupiers established themselves, so food
was a prized commodity. No easy going anymore. We weren't actually starving.
We were just made aware of things to come. With the lining up for food,
which was still distributed in the old way, we, the Jewish population,
had to endure another hardship. Gangs of young Poles kept on picking out
Jewish-looking persons and forcing them out of the bread lines. It was
a real scourge. It wasn't as if the occupying Germans did all those nasty
things. These were our neighbours. Being themselves a conquered people,
having seen for themselves the disintegration of the army and state, were
nevertheless ready for pernicious behaviour towards their fellow citizens.
Not all the Poles engaged in such atrocious deeds. There were however
enough of those hoodlums all over the city, to put fear and apprehension
into our lot. We started feeling surrounded by more than just the evil
occupiers. The process of calumnious signs around us got thicker by the
day.
News of the fate of our father, brother
and uncle, plus numerous relatives, friends and acquaintances, was hanging
over us like a dark curtain. Some people were back. Those that came back
had sometimes news of others that they saw on their run. Sometimes their
stories as to what went on on the highways leading out of Lodz were full
of woe. There was strafing and encircling manoeuvres by the German army.
Sometimes they were fair to the fleeing refugees. At other times they
were bestial.
No sooner did the new authorities
establish themselves in all the public buildings, offices and army barracks,
that ordinances were being issued every few hours. There were so many
restrictions on every normal pattern of life, that nobody knew what to
do, how to earn a living or how would one go to school.
Within a few days, we suddenly saw
father. He came back, with uncle. Without the usual joyous exclamations
for fear of being observed, we thanked our lucky star. Uncle made his
way to his own home in the centre of the city. It was already comforting
to see our beloved father around. He was famished. He needed badly a change
of clothes. It took a few days before he opened up. In the meantime there
was no news about the whereabouts of my brother David. We were hoping
that he somehow made his way east. Many did get to the eastern parts of
Poland. Some got as far as Warsaw. Others went east without any desire
to linger on the roads. All kinds of stories circulated around.
July 4, 1993
Now, looking back to those days seems
like looking into a kaleidoscope. All kinds of stories, persons and happenings
are whirling around. It's difficult to follow each point, without touching
on another point. It became a mad rush of events. Constantly engulfed
by restrictions, shortages, uncertainties and fears; it was a very stressful
time. Every day, every hour, brought new things to the forefront of our
attention. It required a lot of stamina to handle them all at the same
time.
After uncle went back to his home,
he only had a brief respite. Because he lived in a city block which formed
a kind of huge courtyard with several entrances on three streets, he got
into an early contact with the police and Gestapo agents. They were checking
out the complex where he lived. They were on the look out for billeting
space for their army units. When the janitor of the buildings was asked
to name the owner of a large flat in the adjoining building, where uncle
lived, he pointed to uncle as the administrator. The Gestapo agents went
up to the 4th floor and found only auntie at home. They requested that
uncle should come to their offices. Upon being told of what happened,
uncle made his way to our place. He stayed with us three days. Auntie
stayed behind with my cousin. Three days of heart-rending vacillations.
Uncle was an administrator and correspondent to the Jewish socialist newspaper
Folkslajtung. Rumour had it already that the Gestapo, tipped off
by some German citizens of Lodz, were looking for Jewish socialist leaders.
Although not in the top echelon of the leadership, he was nonetheless
a known person to many people. At the same time another close friend of
the family, Joseph Morgentaler, who lived near uncle, was also summoned
to appear at the Gestapo. He also took refuge. It was at the house of
our friends, one block away from us. Both men were having doubts as to
what to do. My uncle got into trouble mainly because he lived in the same
complex where the Bund, the Jewish socialist party, had its offices. It
was however known that the Nazis had no tolerance of socialists. One wondered
whether they would want to pick on socialist activists in a newly occupied
city. Besides, both men had their wives and children left behind. It was
assumed that they were under surveillance all the time. Now, looking back
with hindsight, I might have urged them on, to flee. That is not what
they did. They both went to their homes. Almost at their doorsteps, they
were met by Gestapo agents. I haven't seen them since. As these events
were unfolding, news spread around, that a few others of the Bund were
also arrested. Others that were wanted, managed to hide successfully.
They got to the States eventually. I think that both uncle and J. Morgentaler
went back because they feared for the safety of their wives and families.
Only recently did one of the two surviving sons of Morgentaler tell me
that looking back, he was of the opinion that his father should not have
gone back to their home. It certainly was a traumatic experience for me.
July 5, 1993
About the same time as all this went
on, my brother David returned. He was thoroughly worn out. He went as
far as Warsaw in his flight from Lodz. There he participated in the defence
of Warsaw. When the German push eastward got close to the capital, the
government fled. All the political establishments as well as known personalities
followed the governmental lead. At first Warsaw was supposed to have been
given up without a fight. But a group of staunch patriots, led by the
city president Starzynski, changed the course set by the country's leaders.
They organized volunteer citizens brigades. They also got many army units
that kept on making their way ahead of the occupiers. With little food
or arms and ammunitions, they put up a very gallant defence. When all
of Poland was already conquered, Warsaw still fought on. Hunger and thirst
and merciless artillery bombardments kept on inflicting heavy losses.
At the end of the month Warsaw fell. The soldiers were taken prisoners.
The civilians tried to sneak out whenever and wherever they could. David
got out of Warsaw. He made his way back to Lodz, through devious ways.
But he was back and except for mental scars, was reasonably healthy. Uncle
was in jail. We were aware of his place of imprisonment. Just outside
of Lodz proper, in a converted textile factory, the Germans kept most
of the arrested citizens. There were all kinds of people there. Mainly
activists in political and social movements in Lodz. The Bundist component
was quite visible; several city councillors, party activists as well as
a few others, caught in a tightening net. Nobody at home worked. The factory
where I worked as an apprentice was also the place where father worked.
None of the Jewish people that were employed there before the war were
accepted back. Except for a few trade masters and the director. There
was no income. We dug up all the savings the family had. Things were getting
tough. There was still an availability of food. It was however in a restricted
way. You just had to be very quick to know where what was being sold.
Agility and constant look-out became the motto for survival. Being just
15 years old, I exercised my natural quickness to the limit. Many boys
and girls became proficient providers. The times were probably conducive
for youthful escapades. We knew many nooks and crannies. We could sneak
up on distribution places without being noticed by the militia or hostile
urchins. We also learned how to earn a few groszy. Street peddling,
offering help to elderly and distressed people, as well as finding somehow
a bit of work, strange as it may seem, with the occupying army units.
Quite a lot of those youngsters helped their distraught families get along.
July 7, 1993
The times rolled along. Restrictions
followed one another. First it was a white armband. Then it was an edict
that all Jews were required to wear a star of David on their chests and
on their backs. That made for easy pickings. Some Germans weren't always
aware who was a Jew. The badges told them so without difficulty. Rumours
started making people nervous. The talk was of indications by high German
officials as to creation of a ghetto. With life getting more difficult
as time went on, many young people started looking for a way to escape.
The roads were very hard to traverse. Frequent check ups and identifications
made any journey hazardous.
The war as it went along saw some
new twists. Russia, which signed a treaty with Germany just before the
war started, had a secret clause to it. Both of them agreed to carve up
Poland and proceeded to do so. We were not at first aware as to what was
going to happen to our country. In the middle of September 1939, the Russian
army crossed the Polish border and started a drive towards the river Bug.
That was the dividing line between them and the Germans. The Polish forces
that were withdrawing eastward, encountered the Russians without being
at all aware of that possibility. Their fight with the Russians didn't
last long. Almost simultaneous to the fall of Warsaw, the whole country
was under the yoke of two of its neighbours.
Many people wondered what such an
invasions meant. Some people looked to the east with hope. They were hopeful
of an understanding attitude to our plight both as Polish citizens and
especially as Jews. We were guided by a gut feeling. The Russian government
was forever proclaiming their opposition to German fascism. Going by the
old maxim that the enemy of your enemy is your friend swayed many people
to look towards the east as the salvation. Lots of people, young and old,
were leaving for the eastern parts of Poland. Almost all households started
missing some of their sons, daughters, fathers and many relatives too.
My brother, unable to make anything out for himself since he came back
from Warsaw, left too. After several weeks we got news that he arrived
in Bialystok, a city in the Russian zone. Things were quite hard for the
huge influx of refugees. There were no shelters for them. They had to
find anything they could in order to be shielded from the elements. Their
lot at first was a pitiful one. Very few came back to Lodz or elsewhere
under the Germans. We thought that for him there will be a chance to find
an occupation for himself. Nobody knew at that time what was in store
for those left behind in Lodz. Many of my relatives also went the same
route.
July 8, 1993
In the meantime, when things were
getting tight and life was turning from miserable to very hard, my uncle
Hersz Mayer was languishing in the detention, at Radogoicz. Auntie Lola
and cousin Mendele, a very young boy, moved to auntie's family residence
in a town named Skierniewice. She felt secure there. We looked after uncle's
affairs. I brought uncle daily packages of food, prepared by my mother.
Once I overheard a conversation between Morgentaler's wife Golda and her
younger son Moomek. She somehow talked about a possibility to arrange
for a visit. I related the gist of that conversation to father and mother.
They immediately contacted auntie in Skierniewice. I remember now vividly,
her coming to Lodz. I remember the visit. Only auntie went. She told us
that uncle looked pale and drawn. It was the one and only time that anybody
from the family ever saw uncle after his arrest. Some time later, when
food parcels would not be accepted, we were told that uncle was sent away
to Germany. For months after that I kept on enquiring at the political
prisoners desk in the Jewish community centre. It was always a negative
answer. No knowledge of his whereabouts was the standard response.
At the time when all those events
were taking place, my father kept up a brave posture. He was of the old
school of fighters. He participated in the 1905 uprising against the Russian
autocratic regime. He was an active socialist. For his Bundist and union
activities, he was arrested in 1937. Only because the leader of the Bund
in Lodz, A. Zygielboim, interceded for him, did he escape the fate of
being sent to the infamous Polish concentration camp KARTUZ BEREZA. It
was a very lucky thing. Many people who were sent there came out both
physically and mentally broken.
July 9, 1993
The events under the Nazi rule were
somehow not what my father or the other Bundist activists were accustomed
to deal with. From the outset of the occupation, Jews were continually
being separated from the gentiles. There was no concerted effort on behalf
of the majority Poles and the minority ethnic Germans (Volksdeutsche).
Collective responsibility figured large in the psyche of the Jews. To
dare and resist the occupiers meant to risk the safety and lives of many
other fellow Jews. Lots of the leaders left Lodz. Some were being sought
by the Gestapo. Father's role in both supporting his family and working
in the resistance to the occupiers was precarious. Except for succour
for very needy Bundists who fell prey to circumstances, there was no significant
activity. Also the arrest and subsequent disappearance of his only brother
in Poland left him more despairing then before. As an active trade unionist,
he had many contacts with gentile workers. Those contacts became scarcer
as the occupation went on. However he kept on being stopped and greeted
by all kinds of people. Some were Volksdeutsche who knew him. Those
encounters started to frighten him. There were just too many Nazis amongst
the ethnic Germans. He certainly was not living in any way to give him
a sense of purpose. Although he was an active anti-fascist, he was not
too well thought of by the large group of Jewish communists of his trade
union as well as communists in general.
At one time, way back in the 1920's,
a group of Bundists formed a so-called ComBund. It was the work
of agents from the then already established Soviet government in Russia,
to convert and subvert all socialist movements in the world. Poland, being
a very close neighbour, was particularly singled out for attention. The
textile industry was a large industry in pre-war Poland. Its main base
was Lodz. The Jewish component of that industry was substantial. Therefore
the union of Jewish textile workers became the obvious target of attention.
My father, who was in Germany during the First World War, made all possible
efforts to return to his native Lodz. Many people used the occasion of
being abroad to stay on or move further west. He was in Germany as a forced
labourer. The regime wasn't very oppressive then. He did make his way
back, in large measure to help build the fledgling trade union of Jewish
textile workers. The events above described took place in the years 1917-1919.
Almost immediately after Poland's
liberation and unification, political parties, trade unions, co-operatives,
mutual help societies, secular schools, libraries, sports clubs mushroomed.
Within the socialist camp a great discussion ensued: should socialists,
even the democratic part of it, consider Russia and its dictatorial communist
regime as being the side to which to hitch on to or consider them too
dictatorial for comfort.
The newly formed Socialist International
was the answer of the bulk of socialists the world over. However, small
groups with revolutionary traditions joined up with the communists in
so-called between groups. The ComBund was the way this movement
worked.
My father joined the ComBund.
By doing so, he deprived the Bund of its majority in the textile union.
After a short sojourn with his new group, he returned to the Bund. He
couldn't stomach the communists' quest for power. He was disillusioned.
The Bund became again the majority in the textile union.
However the communists in Russia
and their agents in Poland issued threats after threats. They demanded
that he come back without delay.
When he didn't comply, they declared
him to be a traitor to their cause. He was sentenced to death upon coming
anywhere under the jurisdiction of the Soviets.
Many years went by. The unions developed
into large bodies of power. Sometimes there was co-operation between the
various parties that made up the membership masses. This sentence however
was never revoked.
When so many people went away to
the eastern parts of Poland, then governed by the Soviets, father found
it impossible to go. He knew their regime well. He was too well known
in Lodz. Many Jewish communists left Lodz for the east. There was no mistaking
their evil intentions. Many socialists were arrested by the Soviets immediately
upon their conquest. Not being able to stay on in Lodz, because of the
Germans and being afraid to enter the Soviet ruled part of Poland, he
was torn between many thoughts and possible avenues of escape. It took
my father up until New Year's Day to decide on leaving the city. He left
for Skierniewice, where auntie Lola and cousin Mendele lived. He was planning
to bring mother, sister and me over there soon.
July 10, 1993
Until that fateful departure, life
was being constantly restricted. We were told in a semi-official way that
the Jews of Lodz would be driven into a ghetto. The date kept on being
changed. Rumours abounded about high ranking interventions. American and
other foreign powers, not yet in the war, were supposed to be offering
the German government some incentives to stay their ghettoizing drive.
We were alternatively jubilant and despairing. From different provincial
towns, news came in about deportations and shootings. Some parts of occupied
Poland were incorporated into the German Reich. Other parts of
Poland with Warsaw, Cracow, Lublin and others, were named the Generalgouvernment.
A governor was named. In both parts of Poland, Jews were being denied
the essentials for a normal life. No schools for the children, no work
for professional staff in hospitals, courts, municipal administrations,
technical institutes, etc. Businesses were forcibly taken away and German
commissars took over the running of affairs. Bank accounts were blocked.
Only small amounts of money were left for the owners. On top of it, arrests
were being carried out all the time, on former owners of enterprises.
They were accused of harbouring goods and valuables. Radios were confiscated.
Jews weren't allowed to use the city's transport system. Systematically
mass arrests were carried out. Whole blocks were deported. Nobody could
tell where to. In some cases it was just in nearby towns. In many instances,
there was no news or even indication as to their destiny. People were
also snatched from the streets, not to be seen again. Sometimes those
people just returned the same day or a few days later. Very often accosted
by soldiers, civilian Germans, policemen or just young punks. They were
taken to perform some work. In many instances there were beatings. In
other instances there were just certain tasks, like: loading, unloading,
cleaning, digging and other manual tasks to be done. There were even cases
of being remunerated with some food for the work done. Considering the
general atmosphere of fear, each such "catching" was at best
a fearful thing. Deportations, street-catchings, shooting sprees were
in the order of the day. One just didn't feel safe to be anywhere.
I got caught many times. I was lucky
to have escaped with a few bruises. Once having been caught in the centre
of the city, I suddenly realized that one of the civilian Germans around
me was none other than an old friend of my father's. He worked before
the war in the same factory as father and since the middle of 1938, I
was there apprenticed as a designer. Mr. Kempinski was, as far as I can
remember, an ardent communist. He spent time in Polish jails. He was a
devoted trade unionist. To see him amongst Hitlerites, with a swastika
pin in his lapel, was a shock to me. He recognized me immediately. He
just looked at me and said nothing. I don't think we ever heard of him
or saw him again. There were of course very few encounters between Jews
and non-Jews. There being hardly any private telephones, one was glad
not to be remembered by your German acquaintances. One other episode of
that kind sticks in my mind. A neighbour of ours, a certain Mr. Nickel,
worked in the same factory too. He used to pop in some time. He too was
an ethnic German. He did once warn us of impending danger. He acted as
far as we knew in good faith. Strange as it may seem now, but we got used
to being harassed. We were still in our homes. War news wasn't very good.
We hoped that somehow the Germans would get on with their own affairs
and leave us alone. It was of course wishful thinking. The little that
we had was getting smaller. We were still hoping and trying to see signs
of improvement, when there were none.
July 11, 1993
Whilst this turmoil was going on,
I had to keep myself busy. Things weren't too good financially for our
family. There were no earnings of any sort. Although not yet in a closed-in
ghetto, we, alongside most people, were just subsisting. Since all the
events were taking place around me, I somehow lived in a vacuum. My friends
who were around were all taken up with very urgent tasks. One way or another,
they shared and helped their parents find a way to keep body and soul
together. I too started bringing in something to help out. Since having
been once caught in the street to clean up a German army billet, I started
going to that billet almost daily. The soldiers, who were regular infantry
troops, were somehow not too oppressive. They asked me to do many chores
for them. I used to receive from them food, cigarettes, sometimes even
vodka. I didn't have any particular sense of fear as to their intentions.
As I found out bit by bit, they were already homesick. I remember thinking
of them as ordinary people, just like the people I used to know around
me before the war. They were drafted and were in a war. I even felt a
bit sorry for them and their families. Doing all kinds of chores, like
cleaning, carrying loads, errands, etc. I used to take home quite a bit
of food and other things. I know that it helped at home. I felt proud
of myself. The place where I did all this was in one of the wings of the
big complex where auntie lived. As a matter of fact, it was on the second
floor; uncle's residence was on the fourth floor. Auntie used to come
in sometimes from Skierniewice. Her sister with two little girls (twins)
was having a hard time of it. Once I was asked by some Germans to help
out in clearing another flat. It happened to have been the offices of
the union of Jewish clerks. Their union and some of its leaders were known
to me. Although not yet a union member, I come from a family of ardent
trade unionists. To my great astonishment, I was asked to clear out huge
amounts of files, correspondence, membership lists, memoranda, etc. I
knew from a previous encounter, what things like these could mean to the
safety and lives of the people thus named in those papers. The moving
of those papers and office furniture took several days. I compared this
state of affairs to our own efforts at the beginning of the war. A few
of the active members of the children's organization SKIF (Jewish Socialist
Children's movement), came to the Bund headquarters, which was in the
same place where I worked now, but in a different wing. We destroyed then
all the papers that had the names of its members on it. It took us two
days to clear out most that was around. We even went to the nearby sport
club Morgensztern (Morning Star) and to the Groser Library. We
cleared out all that we could find. When the Germans came in, they couldn't
find any traces to our members. Both the sports club and library were
associated bodies of the fairly large Bund movement. But the clerks union
wasn't somehow in the minds of that group of youngsters. We just didn't
tackle that. We didn't even tackle as far as I remember the largest Jewish
union, the textile workers union. Maybe they, the unions, had their own
groups to do such a job. The union of clerks didn't clear out its papers.
It could have been a disaster. Nonchalantly I kept on burning and throwing
out whatever had a name on it. When it was done I felt a sense of achievement.
At the same time I kept a deep resentment to the leaders of that union.
Why didn't they think of things ahead? I even carried that feeling all
through the war and even now I still feel pangs of anger over it. One
of the leaders of that union lives in Montreal. When I asked him about
it upon arrival in Montreal, he gave me a very evasive answer.
The task of helping out with bringing
in food to the family, made me go out to deal on the sidewalks of Lodz.
I used to sell whatever I could, to bring home some money. I never did
things like that before. Like everything else at that time, things moved
along quite fast. Soon those episodes in my life became just a memory.
July 12, 1993
It was already well into the autumn.
The days were getting shorter. There was a need to prepare fuel for the
cold Polish winter. Just like food so did the supply of wood and coal
become scarce. One had to line up for hours to get something. Lining up
became an art. One had to smell out the possible places where supplies
were likely to arrive. One also had to think of medicines. There was no
medical service, that was normal in the accepted ways. It became a matter
of using one's acquaintances to procure things. The word protekcja,
or inside pull, became the most popular expression. One had to have it.
One could survive without it for awhile; without the pull, life was very
hard. Sometimes extremely so.
News of looming calamities kept on
abounding. From many surrounding towns and villages, reports were never
of any cheer. Just a continuous narration of forced expropriations, deportations,
looting, murder and clear indications of worse things to come. From Warsaw
and other cities, the news was not better.
We kept on getting the occasional
letter from brother. He had a difficult time in Bialystok. There were
lots of homeless people there. Some slept in synagogues, schools and wherever
else there was a spot. There wasn't a shortage of food yet. Hygiene and
appearance were poor. However, comparing it to our lot, it was much better.
Our relatives, especially from mother's
side, were having a harried time. They lived in the north eastern part
of central Poland. One uncle, the youngest, left for the east. That meant
the Russian occupied part of Poland. He and his family were having difficulties.
They had small children. The other uncle, who lived in another town, was
deported with his large family. Grandfather and my unmarried auntie were
deported too. I am not even sure now that I knew the whereabouts of all
of our large family.
In Lodz, we had some cousins and
a great uncle. They too had it hard, like most people in Lodz. One auntie,
who had married my uncle from Belgium, was considered lucky to have left
Lodz just before the outbreak of the war. Mother's oldest brother managed
to get out of Germany two months before hostilities started. He and his
family were in transit in Britain. They were supposed to emigrate to the
U.S.A. It didn't take too long to break the continuity of our and almost
all families in Lodz and elsewhere in Poland. Father made his way to Skierniewice
on the first day of 1940. I accompanied him to the railway station. Of
our immediate family, I was the last one to see him.
July 13, 1993
The winter of 1940 was by old and
young considered a very cold one. The old ones were saying that it was
a record breaker. We were freezing. Deliveries of food, which was being
done by the use of horses, trucks and rail, didn't work well. Fear permeated
the transportation system. Jews who were prominent in the supply industry
were almost eliminated by the occupiers. Poland of those days never had
a modern service. Lack of storage and refrigeration facilities made the
deliveries depend on weather and the traffic police. Nobody was dying
yet of hunger or cold. But it was fearful to be stuck in Lodz then.
Rumours of ghettoization kept on
persisting. It used to be that one day, there were cheerful bits being
bandied around. The next day, the rumours would be full of ominous undertones.
Our area was designated, with just
a few days notice, as a Judenfrei area. We had to pick up whatever
we could and move in with friends a block away. That was our first experience
to be thrown out of home. No transportation was available. I remember
carrying things on my back. Mother and sister did the same. I somehow
had to act the man of the house. It was a traumatic experience. The place
that we moved into became crowded. The other occupants of the apartment
were our friends, the Weingartens. There was a couple there, an old mother,
and a young daughter. With us, it became a crowded dwelling., There were
only two bedrooms. There was no running water. There was an outhouse in
the courtyard. The only thing that alleviated the overcrowding was the
warmth that each person produced. It helped raise the temperature to bearable
levels. However, to negotiate a way to the water well or the outhouse
was sometimes quite perilous. Ice was so thick down there, because of
water and freezing temperatures, that it looked like a bumpy skating rink.
So, with the water supply being a constant hassle, we had to be prudent
with washing both ourselves and the linen and clothes.
As winter wore on, rumours increased.
News filtered in through casual adventurous travellers and the poorly
functioning mail. People were being uprooted. Deportations, sometimes
with a purpose of forced labour and sometimes just to disorient, were
carried out all the time. In winter, this meant danger to life and limb.
Jews had no recourse to any appeals. They became a totally helpless people.
No laws protected them. Anybody could, and they certainly did, rob them,
beat them and kick them around. One almost felt like hunted animals. Only
the counsel of other Jews and your intuition helped you along. Scanty
news kept on coming from brother and father. Sometimes news came through
from the grandfather and aunt who were deported. They were in Plock. They
were there, thrown in with other refugees from Dobrzyn, their hometown.
By the end of February, there was an official announcement in the press
and through the Jewish community council. A ghetto was designated. It
encompassed an area in the poorest part of the city. It was the section
where we were living. It also included, through an access road, the cemetery
and a railway siding.
Normally it housed in very poor conditions
about half the Jewish population of Lodz. The industrial part was on the
other side of town. The sanitation and living conditions were very poor.
It used to be the subject of inquiries and book references. Baluty, as
the area was called, was synonymous with dirt, poverty and dilapidation.
Of course, the area was also ripe with crime, hooliganism, prostitution
and illnesses. For good measure to this picture was added the bad smell
of open sewers and outhouses that were on every street and in every house.
When we started taking stock of our situation, things looked outright
gloomy. Overcrowded as it was already, the area was to receive double
its present population. The only relief to this prospect came from the
fact that the Polish and German populations that were living in our neighbourhood
had to vacate their dwellings. Given the fact that large groups of people
from neighbouring towns were sent into Lodz, it didn't really help much
to have all the non-Jews leave Baluty. It was just another turn of the
ever-tightening stranglehold on us.
July 14, 1993
The winter was hard on us. We were
already experiencing shortages of important foods. Meat, dairy products,
fish or cheeses and eggs, were difficult to get. They were very expensive
and sometimes it was dangerous to get them. We heard stories of live cattle
being smuggled in the night. Then the basements of storage shacks in the
yards were used as abattoirs. Even potatoes, the staple food of Poland,
were hard to procure. The Jewish population was undergoing a metamorphosis.
People were looking desperately for a possible place to live in Baluty.
Those that were lucky or had protekcja, started paying for new
apartments, whilst holding onto their old residences in the centre city.
There was a continuous stream of people with bags in their hands. Some
carried heavier suitcases on their backs, others still hired hand carts
or youngsters with sleighs. Those that were moving earlier had paid for
the chance to find a suitable place. Poorer or middle class people were
running desperately around to find any abode. It was dangerous to walk
in town. As always, the Germans were harassing people. It was getting
to be a game of hide and seek. One had to know smaller roads and side
streets. These were not frequented too much by the police or hooligans.
Being already close to the surviving
line in income, I started going out early in the day to solicit people
to let me carry their parcels. I had my faithful sleigh. I used to love
it. As a young boy it offered me lots of fun and recreation. I became
proficient in my new occupation. It helped the family out a bit. The days
were frosty and windy. One had to watch out for frostbites. Our own family
moved out of the residence where we spent already a few months. We couldn't
get back our old apartment. The city authorities re-zoned the area. We
could again go to our old place. The community council gave away our place.
There was no appeal. We found again lodging with other acquaintances.
It was only two houses away from where we used to live. With the anxiety
created by such an influx of new people into an overcrowded district,
anything that one could find had to be accepted. The place where we wintered
had to be vacated. Close relatives were waiting to move in. With all that
going on, we were getting pretty close to the date when the ghetto was
to close. Barbed wires were already going up in some border areas. The
family was waiting patiently to hear from father. He had been away several
months. His letters and messages were becoming cryptic. He wanted desperately
to re-unite with us. An occasion presented itself. Auntie's sister, who
also lived in Skierniewice but had some ties to Lodz, came to us. She
carried a message with her. She knew of an old man, a so-called Volksdeutsche.
He had a horse and wagon. His presence on such a job could be offering
security. He was supposed to take us to Skierniewice with our belongings.
Time was running out. Only a few days were left before the ghetto closed.
We packed our things at night, and in the early morning we left Lodz.
Although the distance between Lodz and Skierniewice was only 60 kilometres,
we were trudging along slowly. By late afternoon the road we were travelling
became a scene of excitement. Some passers-by on the other side of the
road were warning us of the grave dangers ahead. There was a big roadblock.
Jews and others suspected of being Jews were being picked up. We were
not sure what to do. Our driver suggested that we stop at a roadside house.
We did that. They allowed us, against a payment, to stay in their place
for the rest of the evening and night. All the information that they had
was of a major operation by the Germans. It was pointless to continue.
We somehow sat the night through. The people of the house offered us some
food. In the morning we left the house and returned to Lodz. So much for
the only attempt to leave the city and join up with father. Auntie's sister
left the same day. She had small babies in Skierniewice. In a couple of
days later, on May 1st 1940, the ghetto closed us in. Armed sentries were
posted around the barbed wire fence. For all intents and purposes we were
in a huge prison. It was the first ghetto to be erected in Europe. There
were ghettos before. But they were in the Middle Ages. Some people were
hopeful that it would be easier to live in the ghetto than in town. There
were no other people there but Jews. All the fears of walking the streets
would abate. As always in such circumstances, hope was re-emerging. Maybe
this will give us a chance to survive. Others were very gloomy. Now, they
stated, we are inside a prison. It would be easier for the occupiers to
pick us up, anytime they wanted. We faced another chapter in our lives.
July 15, 1993
Outwardly, very little has changed
in our lives, when the ghetto was closed and we were shut in. At first
it even looked peaceful, comparing it to the just-ended period of continuous
anxieties and fears. There were no Germans to be seen. At the wire fences,
there were quite a lot of them. They guarded the ghetto in the real style.
Every fifty metres was a sentry box. They looked at first as a curiosity.
It didn't last long though. They graduated to become a real menace. But
in the meantime, the streets were peaceful. There was even a lack of traffic.
Horse drawn wagons were delivering food to specially designated stores.
There was a certain relief, because direct fear to go out of one's dwelling,
ceased abruptly. Lots of new forms of behavioural patterns started off.
The novelty of living in a totally Jewish mini-town was new and bred expectations
and wonderment.
It might be in place now to try and
look back on the 9 months of life under the German occupational yoke,
until the ghetto gates closed. Nine months is a classical term for describing
human gestation. It came to signify the development process leading to
life. Either by fluke or by design, it meant for us a symbolic period
between nothing in particular and being shut-in, in an enclosed conclave.
Is there a comparison? These and similar musings come to my mind as I
look back on those days. To be more precise, I want to state that really
it was only 8 months since the outbreak of the war. Taking into account
the preceding weeks before hostilities began it just makes the round figure
of 9 months, a fitting description. We were living up until the fateful
days of August 1939 in a world that meant for us: continuity, life style,
family closeness, idealistic desires, business ambitions, and many, many
more forms of life and behaviour. Ours was a family of secular orientation.
Since I can remember, there was always a certain schism between the grandparents
and my parents. The grandparents were on both sides very orthodox and
observant Jews. As was the case with many families, they lived in small
towns right across Poland. Industrialization and the impoverishment of
the countryside forced many old established families and single people
to look to the big cities as a source of possibilities for the future.
My grandparents (my father's parents) moved to Lodz from a nearby small
town Ujazd. I think all the children were born there. They came to Lodz
when father, who was the oldest son, was a young boy. The other grandparents
stayed on in the small town Dobrzyn. My parents met at the time when there
was hunger in Lodz in 1916. Father's parents, along with many others,
left Lodz in the war. They were looking for places where food was more
readily available. So, from a casual wartime encounter, a marriage followed.
The younger sets of many traditional families didn't want to follow the
old established ways of life. Too much of new thoughts and ideals enveloped
the whole society around them. Although not by any means confined to Jews,
the Jewish youth looked for new ways to cope with daily life and started
forming associations and clubs to give voice to those concerns.
July 16, 1993
So, we are going through the life
story of our family. It was definitely built around the post First World
War reality. Although born in 1924, I was already the second sibling.
My first recollections are of a market square in front of our residence
in a suburb of Lodz: Gornyrynek. Maybe my admiration for horses and peasants
stems from those early years. I remember talking to the animals. Their
constant moving their heads up and down signified for me the mute answers
the horses were giving. I remember those days fondly. It also stuck in
my mind the uproar that the stabilization of the Polish currency created.
Of course, it is a vague recollection only. I remember being fond of making
speeches. The price for a speech used to be a butterfly. My willingness
to get up on a chair and speak comes, I believe, from having been taken
many times to be present at public meetings. My speeches were usually
starting the same way as the public speakers, at the meetings my parents
took me to. But so many little impressions crowd into my mind, that I
can only pick out some. In a while, I recall being already at another
address. It was in the very district that we lived until the war started,
and that was also the place that the ghetto was designated in.
I can't recall any changes to the
life style that was followed in our house. It was the life style of secular
Jewish people. There was always hustling and bustling, about Jewish oriented
and socialist inspired activities. There were changes brought about, at
a later stage. But for a while I remember being a little boy with lots
of friends. The family and the extended family of the friends and comrades
of the parents, provided a pleasant atmosphere. I attended kindergarten
and graduated to become a pupil in the Jewish Secular School system. My
brother too went through the same process. My sister was too little to
be enrolled anywhere yet. Following the change of city government, father
lost his position as an official in the municipal health system. That
was when the socialist majority of city hall was toppled.
Not being able to find alternative
employment, the family moved to Dobrzyn. Life was very different there
than the hustle of life in Lodz. Dobrzyn was a small town. Lodz was a
big industrial city. My parents engaged themselves in Dobrzyn to a new
way of life. They became partners with grandfather Abraham in a market
venture. Dobrzyn was a market town for the local county. Both partners
put up a stand at the market, selling textiles. Father was the buyer.
Having a sound knowledge of fabrics, he knew also where to buy. He was
in the weaving trade all his adult life. Mother with the three of us,
stayed in Dobrzyn approximately three years. I don't know exactly, but
I suspect, that they made a living but not too much of one. For us, however,
it was a new life in new surroundings. Mother was very much at home in
her home town. The three siblings: my brother, sister and I were discovering
new friends. We were also discovering lots about nature. It was a picturesque
town, along the river Drweca. It also had an ancient Crusader castle on
a nearby hill. With all the eagerness of young children we embraced our
new life. We also had some close relatives besides grandfather and grandmother
Sheina. So I went to the local school and became a local boy. The same
went for my brother. My sister was too little to go to school yet. It
was a pleasant time for the youngsters. Always, lots to do. The surrounding
countryside offered unlimited opportunities for play, games, swimming
and exploration.
After three years we returned to
Lodz. Prospects for a job improved. We had to leave grandparents, auntie
Deborah, uncle Chaim, uncle Benjamin-Isser, cousin Goldie and numerous
second cousins, great uncle and great aunt and lots of further distant
relatives. Besides that, we also managed to make lots of friendships and
acquaintances. All this treasure of closeness and happiness was left behind.
Although we visited Dobrzyn quite often in the following summers, the
closeness of those three years remains with me until today.
July 17, 1993
Lodz, upon re-entering it, was the
same grey city of smoke and overcrowding. For me, though, it was already
a different place. I was older and more observant. I noticed the squalor
and dirt of that part of Lodz where we lived before. We came back to Baluty.
It was only there that we could find rentable premises. We moved to a
small house, with a garden in the back. However, the garden was out of
bounds for the tenants. Only the landlord and his family were allowed
to enjoy the bit of shade and greenery that was around. It was a mysterious
place. We had all sorts of imaginative pictures of the garden. As far
as things went, a garden in Baluty was a rarity. So, like Moses in the
legends, we could only catch a glance of the enchanted place. We couldn't
enter it.
Instead of shade and different smells
to the putrid ones around us, we got a noisy apartment. The windows were
right at one of the busy streets and plenty of dampness. We later on joked
about being able to go on sleigh rides right in our own apartment. But
it was on the walls and not on the pleasant hills of Dobrzyn. It was a
cold, noisy place. Under our apartment, there was a small sausage maker.
The combination of all those new elements in our life made us all the
more regret the open spaces of the countryside.
My school was a long way from home.
I wasn't able to be placed in the same school as my brother. There simply
wasn't any room. My sister was enrolled in the same school that I attended
before we left Lodz. For me there was an unbridgeable gap in standards.
My previous school was a Yiddish school, with Yiddish as the language
of tuition. During the three years in Dobrzyn I only studied school subjects
in Polish. So I started school. It was in some ways a replica of home
conditions. Small, cramped, stinking outhouse toilets, and plenty of dampness.
Lots of those endearing terms about
my school come to my mind now, being 9 years old didn't somehow allow
me to be critical. I soon made friends. The teachers were a mixture of
pleasant and choleric people. But in no time the life of a schoolboy took
its course. Similar experiences were had by my brother and sister. My
sister Esther's school was the one that I envied more than my brother
David's. The atmosphere and pupils in the Medem School were very close
to my home environment.
So, some time passed. I soon graduated
from being a little boy to become a member in the SKIF movement. That
was the children's branch of the wide sprawling Bundist movement. My brother
has already been there a while. Mother was a member of the YAF, the women's
branch of the movement. My father was a very active Bundist and trade
unionist all his adult life. I felt good and elevated to become one of
the members of the Bundist family. With Esther's going to the Medem School,
the circle was completed. The school had a wonderful name. Its modern
approach to education and deep commitment to humanity and socialism, made
my sister's school years a real point of admiration in her life as well
as in the whole family's life.
July 18, 1993
After we moved back to Lodz, we still
kept close contact with Dobrzyn. Compared to the smoky air of Lodz, Dobrzyn
and its environs were a balmy experience. The number of tall smoke stacks
I don't know. I only know if anything was forever visible in Lodz, it
was smoking chimneys. Because the city was full of textile manufacturing
plants fired on coal, we, the inhabitants of the second largest city in
Poland, were continuously treated to heavy pollution and stench. Textiles
required lots of water for washing, dying and steam. Such water was available
only in a minute way, through the only narrow body of water that ran through
Lodz. It was so narrow and filthy that it was aptly called the sewer.
The rest had to be found in the proliferation of wells. But the stench
of the chemicals used to process the raw and semi-finished fabrics was
everywhere.
To get out of Lodz became almost
a must for anybody that could somehow do it. Even if only for the duration
of the summer.
We too followed this kind of logic.
So, come the summers, we went off to Dobrzyn. Mostly it was just the siblings.
That was the case when mother started to work too. As summer was a busy
time in the textile industry, the bread winners had to stay behind. Those
days were usually heydays. Romping around the river and the games with
other youngsters filled our days. When mother wasn't working yet, she
would of course be with us.
Those summers finished for me at
the age of 13. By Jewish custom, a boy attaining that age became a man.
That meant a Bar Mitzvah ceremony in the synagogue. It also meant daily
attendance at prayer meetings, besides putting on in the morning the ritual
Tefilim.
All those things were more than my
parents thought was right for a son of a secular family. I was never sent
to a cheder (religious instruction school). So, in order not to
hurt grandparents' feelings, both my brother and I were not visiting with
the grandparents after the 13th birthday. My brother had already stopped
going there almost soon after we returned to Lodz. The organization SKIF
to which I belonged, kept on organizing summer camps. It's to such camps
that I went since my 13th birthday. The summer camps were for a long time
already enticing my attention. So, I entered the summer of 1937 full of
expectations.
July 19, 1993
The first experience of living in
a children's republic was exhilarating. The very word: children's republic
made a very impression. On top of it was the middle name to it. It was
in fact: Children's Socialist Republic. We were assigned groups. Every
morning a plan for the day was announced. Of course there were older people
to run the feeding, administration and health and sanitary concerns. The
planning of activities, cultural, physical fitness, sports, educational
and others were done through joint commissions. The guarding of the camp
was arranged by posting groups of two's along the perimeter of the campgrounds.
This had to be kept up, especially for the nights. We did have quite a
number of hooligans interfering with our campers. There were turbulent
times. Anti-Semitic gangs and even political parties engaged in Jew-bashing
activities. Nazi Germany had already stimulated an otherwise not too tolerant
Polish nationalist milieu. In spite of reports of frequent attacks on
Jews of all ages, we were full of zest. We were getting into the real
spirit of comradely inspired living. Our camp fires and outings, coupled
with explorations of the other participating contingents, made life an
ongoing joy. Groups of children came from three cities, with token delegations
from other places. It was all new and exciting. The camp took place on
the banks of the river Vileyka. It was not too far from Vilno. The very
fact of being at the other end of Poland was a pleasure. Especially since
Vilno was always in my imagination an outstanding place. Both from the
Bundist lore and Jewish associations, Vilno was a beacon of inspiration.
Even the Polish history is resplendent with references to Lithuania and
its largest city. To go to the vicinity of that famous place was a tingling
sensation. We were very thrilled when our respected comrade Artur Zygelboim
came to our camp. He addressed us all at a big bonfire. His stature outlined
by the glowing embers made his appearance almost prophetic. His speech
was no less imposing. It generally exalted the gathered hundreds. We all
felt elevated. Like many such events, it didn't pass without some incidents.
We had a rowing boat overturn in the middle of a lake. We were just shipping
ourselves across a huge lake. Thank goodness nobody was hurt. Just fear
for the overturnees. But all came out well. But instead of getting to
our destination across the lake, we had to skirt it on foot. It took a
long time and it was very hot. When we finally arrived at our destination,
Troki, we rested up and had to face an attack by some hooligans. One of
our leaders got hit with a rock in his head. Again, luckily, it wasn't
serious. We visited the ancient town of Troki. Historically it's very
valuable and many a battle and skirmishes are associated with it. It also
had for us another significance. An old community of Karaites lived there.
These were the remnants with a few other scattered communities across
Poland, of the ancient sect of Jews who refused to follow strict rabbinical
injunctions. They had a synagogue there. It wasn't like the customary
synagogues. These people lived a very closed in life. They were actually
treated much better than Jews by the Nazis. It's hard to say why. The
visit to this Karaite sect added some new dimension to our Jewish knowledge.
On the way back I remember being so tired that I actually fell asleep
walking. We arrived back very late. It was an eventful outing.
Our stay at the camp was marred by
news from home. My friend's father and my father were arrested in Lodz.
The intervention of A. Zygelboim managed to spare my father being sent
to the notorious Polish concentration camp Kartuz-Bereza. My friend's
father was not so lucky. He and at least one other comrade that lives
now in New York City were sent there. They came back and looked as if
they saw another dimension. They weren't talking about their experiences.
They were told on pain of being sent there again to keep silent. But it
was common knowledge what kind of awful place this was. A blot on Poland's
conscience. At the end of our camping period, we visited Vilno. It was
a beautiful city and a beautiful experience. The old streets, the historical
landmarks, the Jewish quarter and so many more points of interest made
that journey the most meaningful experience in my youthful days.
Upon returning to Lodz, I went back
to school for the last school year.
July 20, 1993
My brother also went to a summer
camp. This one was between Lodz and Dobrzyn. Except for a real scare because
of a girl drowning there, their camp was pleasant, according to his relating.
My sister went to Dobrzyn. Being a girl and not yet of the specifically
detailed obligations that traditional Judaism imposes on both boys and
girls, she and mother spent some time in Dobrzyn. The year that followed
my first camp experience was full of events. Although the economic situation
improved somehow, the political spectrum kept on getting cloudier and
heavier. Polish inner politics as well as foreign relations, vacillated
between outright reactionary and pro-fascist to a little more liberal.
There were the natural fears of having its western neighbours express
constant hints as to some territorial changes. There were also the influence
of the western powers like England and France. We, as Polish citizens
with our position as an ethnic minority, were tossed about between the
various twists of policy fluctuations. The civil war in Spain and the
war in Ethiopia and between Albania and Italy added constant anxiety.
My own observations were of course coloured by discussions at the dinner
table. But I also began to see for myself the outlines of the opposing
forces. Liberal and socialist democratic factions were being pushed back
forcefully by many vicious, dark forces. The spectacle of the witch hunting
trials in Russia added more reasons for anxiety. All those events were
being digested and pondered over. It was done at home. It was done in
the SKIF. It was the constant talk amongst our friends. I remember being
deeply troubled by what was going on. There was renewed speculation at
home as to the desirability of emigrating. My uncle, the younger brother
of father's, had settled since 1933 in Argentina. Quite a lot of people
left Poland in the 1930's. First the concern for the grandparents and
then the financial difficulties added an element of reluctant delay in
pursuing this avenue. My uncle in Lodz was also trying to arrange for
emigration. He had no trade as he was an administrator and journalist
for the Bundist newspaper. Buenos Aires was a place where those that went
there were mostly textile craftsmen. He took courses.
I don't remember the exact reason
why, with all the talk about it, it never went further than just talk.
I found out after the war, when I went to visit my relatives in Buenos
Aires, that my uncle couldn't bring himself to spend some hard worked
for money on financing the passage of our families. On his confession
to me, he is forever having deep conscience pangs. He said that instead
of getting a dining room set, he should have spent the money to expedite
his family's emigration. Maybe that is the true reason why we stayed on.
Maybe there were other reasons too. It will remain an unanswered question.