“This is beyond imagining: one’s lucidity is shaken. Difficult to think clearly.”
As the
horrors piled up, the twentieth century taught us to accept such expressions as
useful and accurate, not hyperbole, though the events defied belief and
understanding, and often still do. The slaughter seemed endless but contemporaries
couldn’t believe it and some still deny it – Armenians, Jews, Russians, Chinese,
Cambodians and others murdered by the millions on an industrial scale.
The Black Book of Polish Jewry was an early attempt to
document the Holocaust. It was published in 1943 by the American Federation of
Polish Jews and edited by Jacob Apenszlak and others. Among its sponsors were Eleanor
Roosevelt and Albert Einstein. Critics complained the report underestimates the true scale of the mass extermination. It estimates that the
number of Polish Jews murdered by the fourth year of the war had exceeded 700,000.
Victor Serge
was exiled in Mexico when he wrote the sentence quoted at the top. He was reading
the Black
Book and writing in his Notebooks
1936-1947 (trans. Richard Greeman and Mitchell Abidor, 2019) on November
12, 1944:
“Repeated a
hundred times with technically organized variants of sadism and bestiality, the
same tale of violence, insults, and finally of rationalized extermination in
purpose-built factories. Counting Russian Jews, this must add up to three
million murdered—at least: an entire people.”
I’ve had an
interest in Serge (1890-1947) since the late Sixties when I found a remaindered
copy of his 1931 novel Birth of Our Power
(trans. Greeman, 1967) in, of all places, a hardware/lumber store. Serge’s
political metamorphosis – anarchist, Bolshevik, anti-Stalin Left Oppositionist
– mirrored that of millions, many of whom were murdered by Stalin and his
goons.
Serge was
close to Trotsky. Unlike him and many of his comrades, Serge died of natural
causes. He remained a dedicated revolutionary and Marxist, though he seems to
have had a conscience of sorts, a vestigial moral sense. And he could write, a
rare gift among political extremists of any stripe. While in Mexico he observed:
“Few people know that the so-called Soviet regime is totalitarian. And among
those who are aware of this, many admire it for just this reason.”
Serge
speculates on the operation and organization of the camps: “Probably all the personnel selected
for the horrible tasks,” he writes, “are then killed themselves: either the
agents become dangerous half madmen or the system plans in advance for the
disappearance of such witnesses.” Clearly, he’s thinking of Stalin during the Great
Purge murdering the Old Bolsheviks and other loyal communists. But unlike many
on the Left, Serge is not naïve about human nature when describing the Nazi
atrocities:
“In reality
the system appealed to destructive instincts, to sadism, to the castration
complex in choosing a few thousand brutes ready to do anything. It’s not
difficult to find one hundred thousand out of sixty-five million inhabitants,
and these hundred thousand are largely sufficient for all tasks.”
Serge could be describing ongoing events in the Middle East -- Iran and its proxies, Hamas, Hezbollah and other Jew-hating functionaries. There’s seldom a shortage of volunteers eager to perform such work. “No civilized man,” Serge writes, “is certain he won’t be either murdered or executed or killed by a rocket-propelled bomb.”
I wish more
people would read the fiction of Tadeusz Borowski (1922-51), a non-Jewish Pole sent in
1943 first to Auschwitz-Birkenau, then to the sub-camp at Natzweiler-Struthof
in Germany, and finally to Dachau. A collection of his stories was published in
English in 1967, This Way for the Gas,
Ladies and Gentlemen (trans. Barbara Vedder). I read his stories as though they were a sacred text. I had never read
anything so grim. A warning: events recounted in his stories are shockingly violent.
Atrocities are performed casually by German guards and kapos among the
prisoners, and Borowski narrates them in a voice almost clinical. There’s no
melodrama.
Finally, in
2021, Yale University Press published a more complete edition, Here in Our Auschwitz and Other Stories
(trans. Madeline G. Levine), with a foreword by Timothy Snyder, author of Bloodlands: Europe Between Hitler and Stalin
(2010). The earlier collection’s title story is here translated as “Ladies and
Gentlemen, Welcome to the Gas.” Its narrator works on the ramp beside the
railroad tracks (as Borowski did), unloading the train cars filled with
prisoners. At one point he pulls back from the scene and describes the
larger context. In effect, he tries to make sense of the Holocaust and suggests
it may continue without end:
“The
transports grow into weeks, months, years. When the war ends, they will count
up the incinerated. They will calculate a total of four and a half million. The
bloodiest battle of the war, the greatest victory of united and unanimous
Germany. Ein Reich, ein Volk, ein Führer – and four crematoriums. . . . The Jews will
burn, the Poles will burn, the Russians will burn . . . . The gas chambers will
be improved, made more efficient, will be more cunningly disguised.”
Borowski
survived the camps. Like Paul Celan, Jean
Améry and Primo Levi he committed suicide. He was twenty-eight.
And the slaughter of innocents and the guilty goes on. I've read many 'I Bear Witness" books about the horrors inflicted on millions of my fellow human beings. The 20th century was the most murderous in history, but the 21st appears to be keeping pace. The war in the Middle East is bringing us closer to the brink of another world war. In my war, Vietnam, Sir Max Hasting, writing in his book "Vietnam: An Epic Tragedy estimates a loss of 2 million military and civilian lives. "One's Lucidity is Shaken" indeed.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the recommendation. Just finished "We Were In Auschwitz" (1946) by 6643 Janusz Nel Siedlecki, 75817 Krystyn Olszewski, and 119198 Tadeusz Borowski
ReplyDeleteGrim, terrible stories.
Strikingly, the First Welcome Rain 2000 edition is covered in a blue-gray striped cloth. Part of the original 1946 Polish edition was bound in "stripes" cut from original garments. (Made from "nettlefiber, it was said".)