I had a birthday recently, and was lucky enough to
be given some excellent books. One, however, I already had, so I exchanged it
for a memoir: Boy 30529, by Felix
Weinberg.
This is, by its very nature, an unusual book,
because it’s written by a Holocaust survivor, and as Weinberg says: ‘The
typical camp history of the millions ended in death, and could therefore never
be told in the first person.’ Weinberg was just fifteen in 1942 when he was
sent to Theresienstadt, not far from Prague ,
along with his mother and younger brother. His father had gone to England to try and arrange to get his family out
of Czechoslovakia ,
but there were too many obstacles and he didn’t manage it.
Theresienstadt was a holding camp. Originally been built as an army garrison for 7,000 soldiers, it now held ten
times that number of Jews. In such conditions disease was rife and spread
quickly; thousands died. But you could keep your own clothes, there was an
element of self-government, the prisoners organised education for the children
and shows and concerts, and if you could manage to find ‘protected’ employment,
you could, for a while at least, stave off transportation to the east. Although
the prisoners feared the prospect, no-one knew exactly what awaited them in the east;
Weinberg heard grown-ups say, ‘It couldn’t possibly be much worse than here!’
As he comments, ‘How ludicrous that sounds in retrospect.’
After a few months, Felix and his family could no longer avoid the journey east. His subsequent travels are a roll-call of names that signify utter horror: Auschwitz, Blechhammer, Gross-Rosen, Buchenwald .
Partly through luck, partly because of his age – old enough to avoid the fate
of the children, like his little brother, who were not useful as workers, but young
enough to be strong – and partly, perhaps, due to his upbringing and innate
resilience, he survived. His brother and mother did not. His brother was sent
to the gas chambers at Auschwitz: ‘It does not do to dwell on these thoughts if
one wants to live the semblance of a normal life,’ Weinberg writes with telling restraint, ‘but I
invite anyone who wishes to share my nightmares to picture that group of
children, including my terrified little brother, being herded into the gas
chambers.’ He never managed to find out how, where or when his dearly loved mother died. After the end of the war, he arrived in Britain and was
reunited with his father. Despite an almost complete lack of formal education
as a child, he eventually became a professor of physics at Imperial College .
Like so many people of that generation, he seldom
spoke of his experiences. As far as possible he wanted to forget them – he had
no wish to be defined ‘merely’ as a survivor. But in the late 1990s, Suzanne
Bardgett at the Imperial
War Museum
was putting together a Holocaust Exhibition. Weinberg sent in a shabby, odd
looking leather jacket. He had ‘liberated’ it from a Buchenwald guard, after
the latter’s death, and had worn it since to keep him warm while flying round London on his motorbike.
(Had you been writing his story in a novel, would you have predicted that? I
don’t think I would. I’d probably have had him ceremonially setting fire to it,
or cutting it up and using the pieces to clean shoes.)
A few years after that, he got in touch with
Suzanne again. He had decided to write a memoir of his early life, for his
grandchildren, he said; would she be interested in reading it? Of course she
would.
There are so many interesting things in this book. How, indeed, could an account by somebody who experienced the
horror first-hand fail to be anything but gripping? I read it in an afternoon.
One thing that strikes me is that the narrative of the camps takes up less than
half of the book. It is easy to see that though he remembers life in the camps with a terrible clarity, he has no wish to dwell on it. The first part, and I’m sure the part he most enjoyed
writing, is about his childhood; the mother and father he loved and who gave him a wonderful childhood, providing him with a raft of
memories which he dreamed about in the camps. As he says, it was terrible indeed
to wake from the dream to the reality; but still, such memories must have provided a
wellspring on which he could draw to remind him that there had once been a different
kind of life.
At the beginning of the section about the camps,
Weinberg includes a chapter entitled Holocaust
Literature and Reality. He says: ‘I have always tended to avoid Holocaust
literature, and find some of the recent fictional accounts masquerading as true
stories profoundly disturbing… To us (Holocaust
survivors) it is tantamount to desecrating war graves.’ When I first read
this, I took it to mean novels; on reading it though again, I see that he
qualifies it by saying: ‘…so long as the result is presented as fiction there
is no harm.’ (And a little research reveals that, astonishingly, there have indeed been falsified accounts which masqueraded as truthful ones.) So are novelists who write about the Holocaust off the hook? I’m
not sure. I suspect that many of us can immediately think of certain very successful novels about the Holocaust which could be said to
sentimentalise it, if such a thing could ever be possible. And yet… and yet:
even those books keep the memory alive, and introduce new generations to the
appalling truth that such a thing can actually have happened, and not so very
long ago.
We often write on this blog, about the efforts we
make to ensure factual accuracy in depicting our chosen historical period. But
perhaps we need to consider, with the utmost humility, whether it is not even more
important to strive for emotional truth: and to accept that we can never be
sure that we are right when we believe that, in a particular situation, these
characters will behave in such and such a way for those reasons. Weinberg’s
memoir shows over and over again that it is very difficult to predict how people
will feel and behave in extreme conditions. Of course that’s what we do, what all novelists do, but - forgive me if this sounds portentous and obvious - we
must do it with tremendous care.
My father was a prisoner of war for five years. I’m
sure he would agree that he did not experience a fraction of the horror of life
and death in a concentration camp. But still it was tough. He rarely talked
about it, and then only told us the funny stories. But I do remember how dark
his face was once, when he stared into his whisky glass – and into the past – and said, “Nobody knows what they’re capable
of. Not till they’re really up against it.”
I’ve written about his experiences – fictionalised
them – but, particularly after reading Weinberg’s memoir, I’m not sure I should
have. I can imagine what it would have felt like to be in some of those
situations he was thinking of, but did I get it right? How can I possibly know?
But maybe attempting to walk in his shoes is a reasonable endeavour. I’d like to
think so, but I’m really not too sure.
9 comments:
This sounds like a very special book.
I think your attempt to walk in your father's shoes is more than a reasonable endeavour. More people should try it.
That's a really good post. It is a real problem. I have just written a book for 8-12 year olds which deals with the attitudes that led to the holocaust, and I found that when I got to the bit where the survivor of the holocaust speaks to the present generation, I could only write a list of people who died, and leave gaps in the narrative. I stuck to describing it at third hand in 'Girl with With a White Dog', but I think that a good respectful writer can manage to try to help people understand it at a closer distance and even writing in the first person. I am sure, from reading your post, that your writing about your father's experience will be full of respect and love, and not without pain for you.
Your father's story was in the safest possible hands - looking forward to reading it.
Great piece, your book sounds as though it will be more than valid, it will be valuable. Writing biographies set in WWII, I am also terrified that I might 'exploit' historical incidents, yet it might also be an omission of duty not to cover things. Hard to navigate, but important to think about.
Thank you, everyone. And Clare - I really enjoyed your book, The Spy Who Loved. What a remarkable - true - story!
I'm a bit late coming to this but thank you, Sue, for such an interesting post. I agree with Clare, your book is not just valid but important. If you don't tell it, your father's story would not reach a wider audience. By doing this, you are honouring his memory and his experience and the experience of many others who suffered on both sides during the Second World War.
Thank you, Celia!
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