Auschwitz: A
Breaking Point (Reprinted with permission)
By Paula R.
SternEveryone
has a breaking point. It is the point at which
you simply feel you cannot take anymore. You
cannot cry more, you cannot feel anger and you
don't want to feel sadness. You feel that your
heart hurts, and you don't want to feel that
either. I watched those who accompanied me on a
trip to Poland two years ago. Each had their
breaking point, some had more than one.
I didn't break in Chelmno beside the grave of a
little boy, though I thought I would. He was
only a small infant when he died sixty years
ago. His remains were hidden under a staircase
and unearthed only recently. Chances are that
his parents hastily buried him before they too
went to their deaths. It was with anger that I
stood beside the baby?s grave, and it was with
sadness that I left it. He only lived a short
time, modern science says two or three days.
Alone he remained, until he was reunited with
his parents some 61 years later. When I first
learned about the Chelmno baby, I asked where he
was reburied, and was shocked to hear that
they'd buried him in Poland. What right did they
have to bury him there? He should have been
brought home. As a parent, it is what I would
have wanted for my child. But the Poles would
not allow it, I was told, and that angered me
more. Who are they, after all they did and all
they did not do, to determine where a Jewish
child is buried?
At Chelmo, I felt deep anger. Anger at the
Germans who had murdered this little baby, only
three days old. Fury at the church that towered
nearby, that witnessed the daily murder and was
used by the Germans when they couldn't kill Jews
fast enough. And pain. Sadness because a world
allowed this to happen and pain that only a
woman can feel at the thought of a woman giving
birth and then losing her child. Perhaps it is a
pain that even another mother can't understand.
I tried imagining a woman, just three days after
giving birth, who was taken with her infant and
killed. Despite all these emotions, I didn't
break in Chelmno.
I didn't break in Maidanek either. Like Chelmno,
it was very close. I was overwhelmed by the
piles and piles of shoes. More than 800,000
shoes. Each pair represented a life, a story, a
person. So many lives...but there too...I knew I
had to continue, see more, learn more, feel
more.
There were many places that I didn't break.
Cemeteries and forests that hid mass graves. The
children's forest...that holds the graves of
hundreds of Jewish children, and their parents
grave on the other side of the hill. Everywhere,
I observed, I took pictures, I was deeply
saddened, and committed to seeing and
understanding what happened in each place. It
was a learning experience, this was why I came
to Poland. To see, to feel. It took days to
build up to the point that I felt I couldn't
stand being in Poland for even another moment,
time to understand that the evil that remained
was stronger than I was, stronger than I could
ever be. In Israel, the evil cannot defeat us,
but in Poland, the evil is all that remains for
a Jew. Poland is a beautiful land...but not for
the Jews.
I wanted Poland to be cold and dark. I was
shocked to find it warm and sunny, filled with
forests and green fields and streams. But there
was a coldness that I felt down to my bones. The
green fields didn't hide the blood and bones. It
didn't even bother me when a drunken Pole yelled
out "Auschwitz" as if that were the worst curse
he could think of...and it probably was. The
Jews are all dead (except a few...who don't
understand why they remain, who welcomed us and
smiled sad, confused smiles...and then watched
us go). There were places I cried, places I felt
a deep anger and a deep hatred. I argued with
myself, reminded myself of then and now, the
realities are different, hopefully the people
are too. It worked for a while. Then they took
us to Birkenau, to Auschwitz.
I broke in Auschwitz. It was so vast, so evil.
The sun was shining beautifully, tourists from
South Korea came and asked some of the Israeli
girls (carrying the Israeli flag) to pose with
them. Evil can be ignored when you only see the
buildings, the broken rails, the decaying
barracks. What harm could have been done in such
a place? Fields of green grass, not a cloud in
the sky. A cafeteria at the entrance and clean
bathrooms. Post cards and books and film and
candies can be bought in the "museum" entrance,
all cheerfully manned by smiling Poles. Our
Polish guide laughed and flirted with the bus
driver. She was happy...employed for another day
in a country where the people need work.
Some of the Israeli girls in our group smiled
into the camera as the South Korean boys took
their picture, and I was ashamed for them all.
It wasn't my place to tell them, and yet I was
one of only a few mothers on the trip, so
quietly, in Hebrew, I asked them to remember.
"We are in Auschwitz," I said to them, and that
was all it took. They understood right away.
This was a place of ugliness, of death, of evil.
You have to look past the green grass and the
tall trees. Back to a time when it wasn't green,
when it was so cold, explained one survivor,
that the water from the brief shower the Nazis
permitted them to take in the morning, froze on
their bodies when they were forced to run back
to their barracks without clothes. We saw the
communal toilets...just a long slab of cement
with holes in it...all meant to degrade, to
dehumanize, to humiliate. I almost broke there,
but not quite. I thought I could manage the
rest, after seeing that. It couldn't be worse
than that, I thought.
They took us to the collection rooms. Mountains
of hair. Prayer shawls. Suitcases with names of
those who came, but didn't go and a hill of
artificial limbs. Which sick minds, I wondered,
required the collection and sorting of these
items? If you haven't seen it, you can't imagine
the horror of those rooms. And yet, even if you
do see them, you still can't know the stories
behind each item. The anger was back, disgust
stronger than ever. I could defeat Auschwitz, I
told myself. I'd come here strong and aware and
I would defeat this place of evil. It wouldn't
break me. They took us out along the path that
millions had walked. I remembered what our
Israeli guide had told us the first time he took
us into a gas chamber, just a few days before.
"Remember," Haim said, "remember, you are going
to come out." I came out.
But what we were seeing was all wrong. There was
no grass growing in 1944, explained the survivor
that came with us. The inmates of the
concentration camp, those who were not murdered
immediately, would eat the grass. There was so
little to eat, he said, and so the land was cold
and barren and empty, not like what we were
seeing at all. The crematoria have been
destroyed. They are only rubble now. You can
only imagine that the crumbled cement and
twisted metal once served the Germans well.
Moshe, our survivor, talked about his mother,
and the train that he was on...that should have
come to Auschwitz, but had to turn around
because someone had destroyed the tracks. He
took out 7 small cards engraved with the names
of his family and placed them on the ground.
Then he took out a bag of soil from Israel and
spread it next to the cards.
I didn't want to bring soil from Israel to place
at Auschwitz. It is a custom that some follow -
to take holy soil and place it on the graves of
Jews buried outside of our land. The soil serves
as a marker - here lies a part of our people.
But I couldn't bring myself to place our soil in
that land, and so I brought with me a picture of
the Western Wall. It was taken during my son's
bar mitzvah and I thought of it as a way to show
my son's great grandparents, great aunts and
uncles, that their descendent had found his way
home. They died in Auschwitz, but my son, who
carries the name of one of them, the great
grandson of four of them, was alive and strong
and tall and handsome...in Israel.
They gave us a few minutes to stand beside the
rubble of one of the crematoria by ourselves.
Some recited Psalms. Others talked quietly. I
took out the picture of my children, the one I'd
carried with me throughout Poland. It was my
rope to sanity. I took out the picture of my
son's bar mitzvah celebration at the Western
Wall, the Kotel. And then, amid the twisted
metal of the destroyed crematorium, under a
small overhang that I hoped would protect it
from the rain, I tucked the picture behind a
metal bar pressed into the cement.
I stepped back, realizing for the first time,
that I was really going to leave it here. The
Kotel, the last remnant of the holiest site in
Judaism, where we'd celebrated my son's bar
mitzvah, an everlasting symbol of our past...and
the rubble of the crematoria, another symbol. I
thought of my mother-in-law, who'd been put in a
gas chamber in Auschwitz. I don't know if it was
that one or one of the others, but it hardly
matters. She was lucky because she was taken out
at the last second when the Nazis realized they
needed more women for a work detail. I thought
of my grandfather, who'd lost his mother and
sisters here, where I was standing or very close
by. I thought of my husband, who had never known
the special love of a grandparent, because
Hitler had a plan. It was very hard to leave the
picture there.
I looked at the rubble of the crematorium, all
that is left of the nightmare and there, in the
place that had known such horrors, I couldn't
hold back the tears. I wanted to go home, away
from this place. I had reached the breaking
point. I couldn't stop crying. During the days
before we'd come to Auschwitz, I'd tried to
comfort several girls, as I tried to comfort my
own daughter when I saw she needed it. Many
times, I hugged one of them, offered them some
tissues, told them to think about home. But this
time, it was the girls who came to me.
Auschwitz.
For a moment, I thought of retrieving the
picture. Maybe I shouldn't leave it there. I
knew they'd throw it out the first time they
came to clean the place. What would they care?
The Poles call Auschwitz a museum and as good
curators they'll want to clean the place. But I
didn't care. I wasn't leaving the picture for
the Poles. I was leaving it for Raiza and Shmuel,
for Shaye Zev and Benyamin Elimelech, for Esther
Chaya. I wanted them to have it.
May they long be remembered, and may the names
of those who put them there be erased from all
time ... not the memory of what they did, but
all that they wished to accomplish, all that
they wanted, all that they planned. May their
identities as individuals be blurred by the
collective evil they inflicted upon so many.
January, 2004 |