Authors: Jacob Rosenberg
Ours was a neighbourhood of slender people, but slender not through any inclination to diet. âHunger' was, to us, a household word. Even so, one should not try to compare our prewar hunger to the starvation that assailed us during the ghetto years. Ghetto famine was beyond the imagination even of a Knut Hamsun.
A family might go to bed at night and wake up in their very own private morgue. At the height of our suffering, we died at the rate of some forty people a day. And yet, though it may appear unreal, our ghetto also contained a well-fed elite for whom âshortage' was an alien concept â an elite who had servants and lived in proper houses, surrounded by little gardens where the air smelt of raisins and almonds and fresh green grass.
The Blums were new neighbours, a family of four: he was a coachman, she a cleaning lady, and they had a small boy and a smaller girl. When Mr Blum was reported missing in action defending our country, his wife was left to fend for the children on her own. She was always the first in the queue to collect her weekly food-rations, and in the evenings she would come over to tell my mother of her joy in being able to feed her little ones. âThe war will soon be over,' she would say, âand my husband will come back to me. I'll show him his kids, and he'll take me in his arms and say,
Thank you, my love, you have done well
.'
It was a black day when Mrs Blum's weekly provisions were stolen. âMurderers!' she cried. âMurderers! What have you done? You've slaughtered my children! What am I to do? Oh God, what am I to do?'
She could do nothing. Ghetto life knew very few mercies.
A week later, when my mother went up to the attic to hang up some washing, she found two orange enamel saucepans lying on the floor. Assuming that they belonged to someone who had been âresettled', she took them home, and the same evening used them to cook some soup for dinner. Just as she was about to serve our lavish meal, Mrs Blum burst in, looked around and left without a word. Half an hour later she returned in the company of her cousin, a member of the Jüdischer Ordnungsdienst, the Jewish ghetto police. Pointing to mother's new acquisitions, she exclaimed: âIn those I kept my children's food!'
I was arrested on the spot. At the watchhouse they asked me to sign a statement admitting my crime. When I refused I was tied up; then, after fifteen minutes of solid thrashing, one of my tormentors showed me the dotted line on a sheet of paper. âWe'll make you sign, sonny,' he said. âNo!' I replied, observing his grotesque pretence at Polish, his uneasy selfassurance and his absurdly affected manner of speaking.
In the morning I was set free. When I got home, father told me they had come to see him and had informed him that I had signed a confession. He didn't believe them, but was ready to hand over every scrap of food we had in return for his son's release. They had agreed â on condition that Mr Blum's shoes, which had been stolen along with the food, be included. Father took off his only pair and offered it to them.
But these were not the shoes in question, so they had left empty-handed.
What had happened was this: Father had gone to see my parents' employer for the past thirty-five years, Pinkus Gerszowski, who belonged to the ghetto hierarchy. Gerszowski had contacted the director of the factory where I worked, who confirmed my presence at work on the day of Mrs Blum's tragedy.
A fortnight later Mrs Blum's provisions were stolen again. She grew suicidal and would not stop screaming. âWhat will my husband say? What will he say? Tell me, good people, what am I to do?' Somehow, with the help of her neighbours, she made it through to the next weekly ration.
Shortly afterwards, on a grey Monday morning when Mrs Blum had gone to work leaving her two little ones with a friend, someone stood at her door and tampered with the lock. Softly humming to himself, the thief entered, gathered into a small sack what remained of the family's food, and was about to leave when Mrs Blum's policeman cousin jumped out from the cupboard and knocked over the intruder â whom he immediately recognized as a young tough living in our block. âYou'll rot in jail for the rest of your life,' he told him, and escorted him to the watchhouse. By dinnertime, however, our thief was back in the yard.
How was that possible?
Simple. His uncle happened to be the Mrs Blum's cousin's superior!
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Honeymoon
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abia 13 had once been a school of three hundred children. The Germans evicted them all, burned their books and replaced the benches with sewing-machines. Our working day began at eight and finished at six, with thirty minutes for lunch; every second Sunday we had off. The director of our factory, the police officer Kohen, was known for his cruelty and stupidity. He would lash workers with his leather belt and shower them with obscenities for downing tools five minutes before knock-off time.
In 1902 a Bundist cobbler and activist, Hirsh Lekert, had attempted to assassinate the governor of Vilna, Von Wahl, for doing exactly what Kohen was doing. Lekert died for this endeavour, but lived on as a legend in the hearts of his comrades. Our place, however, had no Lekerts.
The factory was set up in such a manner that no worker would be face to face with another. Twenty-year-old Adamowicz, known as Adam for short, sat in front of me. A tall, emaciated and likeable fellow, whose features would be paradise for any cartoonist, he was a frightful cynic about the holiest things in life, though not on the subject of food. Hunger made Adam cry.
Come twelve o'clock he would grow restless, almost wildly so. âSoup time, soup time,' he kept repeating in his deep baritone, and when he heard the steel barrel of steamy liquid being rolled into the factory yard, his already protruding ears pricked up, his narrow eyes lit up, and the nostrils of his oversized nose (which occupied most of his meagre face) became alive with an animal awareness. As usual, his excitement was shortlived: in vain did he search in his bowl for a chunk of potato â the thick part of the meal which our forty-year-old server, Maryla, reserved for Kohen and his associates.
I recall the fateful day when Adam changed his tactics. Instead of being first in the queue to obtain a serving of Maryla's mercy, he placed himself last. An unreachable treasure lay at the bottom of the barrel and he was determined to secure his share. Almost dancing with anticipation as he edged closer, Adam, his deep baritone in excellent form, assailed Maryla with the ditty of a well-known ghetto poet:
O lady with the ladle,
I don't mean to bicker,
But please, a little deeper,
Please, a little thicker...
Within a few days Adam's bowl was being rewarded with twice its usual portion, and soon afterwards he told me that he was going to marry Maryla. Why, I enquired. âThat dowry of hers, of course â and love, love,' he replied. âAt midday a pot of thick soup, at midnight a thick pot of flesh!'
The âwedding', if it took place, must have been a low-key affair. Maryla's husband was presumed to have died somewhere in the snowfields of Russia, Adam had no siblings, and his deeply religious parents had been resettled to heaven the previous year. But news of the happy match quickly reached our all-knowing Kohen, and since his soup was no longer quite what it used to be, he decided to take remedial action. When Adam, who had always been one of the best workers in our group, received his next pay, he found to his astonishment a note advising of his impending resettlement. A similar note was inserted into Maryla's pay. The following day Adam came to work to say goodbye. I asked him where he was going. âHoneymoon,' he said, and vanished.
When he reached his destination, they made him write a letter:
Dear friends,
  Â
We arrived safely, the journey was a breeze. Maryla was immediately appointed manageress in a fancy kitchen. As you can see, the dowry holds fast! And before long I'll be meeting up with my dear parents.
Yours, Adam
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A Reading
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Our literary meetings stood out for me like a cultural ark in the time of an anti-cultural flood. Some readers may see this as a post-ghetto illusion, for truly, how can one think of culture with death constantly knocking on the door? And yet, anyone who ever did time will know that even in prison it is possible to experience a sense of freedom. Sometimes, hope can be strongest when lying on its deathbed.
My colleagues, like myself, had not been brought up on the Bible, so the piece we were about to hear on this occasion came as something of a novelty. âA genuine story, and especially a fable,' began our reader for that evening (sadly, I'm unable to recall his name), âtravels the oceans of time only to return to its port of departure. My story tonight is called
Chosen
. One could say that it is about the past, the present, and the future...'
When we had settled into a unanimous readiness, he unfolded a sheet of paper from his pocket and commenced his reading. It is not an altogether unfamiliar tale, and I'll reconstruct it here as best I can.
God almighty was sitting on cloud nine with His angels one day when, out of the blue (or was it the black?) there appeared his highness, the Adversary. âAnd where have you been, my boy?' God asked him.
âI have been roaming Your world, Master,' the other replied.
God nodded. âDid you happen to catch sight of My chosen? Surely there is no other community on earth like theirs â blameless, upright, charitable, their synagogues always packed, and not just on the holy Sabbath.'
âAh, well, Sir,' sneered the Adversary, âthey have good reason to be as they are. You provided that tribe of cobblers, tailors, joiners, weavers and little rabbis with the best of life. As it is written,
Happy is the man who is satisfied with his lot
. But try to deprive them of Your benevolence, and You'll soon find out what a miserable crowd they really are.'
âYou think so?' said God. âLet's wager on it â I leave them in your hands.'
So the Adversary darted back to hell, picked up his most monotonous accomplice, dull as a dirty autumn fog but more vicious than a crazy dog, and told him: âTake care of these so-called
chosen
for me.' The diligent delegate quickly set to work. First he deprived the people in question of their livelihood, looted their homes, stole their possessions, burned down their prayer-houses, saw to it that they received pitiless beatings. Yet the community remained steadfast. âGod has given, and God has taken away,' they said as one. âMay His name be blessed for ever and ever.'