Wednesday, July 22, 2020

'Killing Turned Out to Be Supremely Easy'

From Zbigniew Herbert’s “Albigensians, Inquisitors and Troubadours” in The Barbarian in the Garden (1962; trans. Michael March and Jarosław Anders, 1985):

“They are barefooted, armed with clubs and knives, dressed only in shirts and trousers, but their thirst for blood is inexhaustible. They manage to break into the town following the members of the careless expedition. Once inside, they spread terror;  the assault on the walls takes only a few hours. A crowd of survivors gathers in Saint-Nazaire Cathedral, and in the churches of La Madeleine and Sainte-Jude. The soldiery break down the doors and slaughter everyone: the new-born, women, cripples, elders, and priests celebrating mass. Bells toll for the dead. Extermination is total.”

On this date, July 22, in 1209, the people of Béziers, in the Languedoc region of southern France, were slaughtered in the first major engagement of the Albigensian Crusade. Earlier in the month, Pope Innocent III had called for a crusade against the Catharist heresy, also called Albigensianism after the city of Albi where the movement started. The army of soldiers and mercenaries was led by the Abbot of Citeaux, Arnaud Amalric, who said, probably apocryphally, Caedite eos. Novit enim Dominus qui sunt eius. This came in reply to being told there were faithful Catholics among the inhabitants of Béziers: “Kill them. For the Lord knows those that are His own.” The town was pillaged and burned. Herbert writes:

“Pierre de Vaux-de-Cernay, a Cistercian monk and chronicler of the expeditions against the Albigensians, wrote that in La Madeleine alone seven thousand were slaughtered, which probably is an exaggeration. Historians estimate, however, that some thirteen thousand ‘innocent’ people were killed in Béziers. What makes this figure even more terrifying is that inhabitants were put to the sword without discrimination.”

This was written by a Polish poet who was 15 in 1939 when the Soviets invaded Lwow, which later was captured by the Nazis, then re-captured by the Soviets. Herbert fought in the underground. He recounts the slaughter of the Cathars in the context of the Holocaust and the Soviet murder of millions. If there is any hope in Herbert’s essay, any sense that something of value survived, it’s in his mention of the three Albigensians who escape with “the remaining treasure, the holy books” – that is, with the gifts of civilization. This echoes three lines from the title poem in Herbert’s Report from the Besieged City (trans. John and Bogdana Carpenter, 1985) written after Wojciech Jaruzelski’s neo-Stalinist crackdown in December 1981. The hope is attenuated but real:

“and if the City falls and one man survives
he will carry the City inside him on the paths of exile
he will be the City”

In one of those strange convergences that echo through history, July 22 in 1942 was the start of the Grossaktion (“Great Action”) Warsaw, the Nazi code name for the deportation and murder of Jews from the Warsaw Ghetto. Some 400,000 Jews had been packed into an area measuring 1.3 square miles. That summer more than a quarter-million of them were sent in cattle cars to the recently opened Treblinka death camp, fifty miles northeast of Warsaw.

Two years later, Vasily Grossman, Soviet war correspondent and future author of Life and Fate, was among the first journalists to visit the remains of Treblinka and collect eyewitness accounts. His article “The Hell of Treblinka” was published in the Soviet literary journal Znamya (Banner) in November 1944, and later entered as evidence during the Nuremberg Trials. Grossman writes:

“Killing turned out to be supremely easy—it does not entail any uncommon expenditure.

“It is possible to build five hundred such [gas] chambers in only a few days. This is no more difficult than constructing a five-story building.”

[“The Hell of Treblinka” is collected in The Road: Stories, Journalism, and Essays; (trans. Robert and Elizabeth Chandler with Olga Mukovnikova; New York Review Books, 2010).]

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