Pages

Thursday, 1 June 2023

The End Of The Beginning by S. Nadja Zajdman, freshly sqeezed orange

 

“Now this is not the end.  It is not even the beginning of the end.  But it is, perhaps, the end of the beginning.”  Winston Churchill

 

It was midnight, and silent.  Mannheim had not known a silent midnight in two years.  Skulking in the bushes beyond the ruins of the Rathaus, Renata bid her time.  The lights inside American Military Government headquarters were out; the moonless sky was black.  Seizing the moment, the youngster dashed across the grounds and tore up the flowerbed…

 

A jeep carrying two G.I.s roared up in front of the apartment that Chaplain Hasselkorn had requisitioned for three Polish Jews who had passed on false papers.  A young man and two young women; one, still in her teens, had been brought to him by a Jewish G.I. six weeks before.  Foraging for food, the younger girl had been caught in last-minute crossfire.  Crouching for cover in the rubble of a gutted home, she overheard a soldier trying to communicate with a German civilian in a guttural language, she knew, was not German.  She waited for the G.I. to finish speaking.  She skirted around the scraps of metal and loose bricks that littered the devastated streets, running after him.  “Jude!”  She shouted.  The soldier bristled   “What?”

“Jude!”  Renata insisted, pointing at him.   

The soldier glowered.  “Who the fuck are you?!”

            Jude!  Ich bin Jude,” Renata pleaded, first, in desperation, and then with a resurfacing sense of hope.

            “Oh Jesus!”  Finally, light had dawned.  “You…?”

            “Ja!  Jude!  Jude!  Ich bin Jude!”  Renata beamed, fervently shaking her head.

            “Oh Christ!”  The Jewish G.I. gasped in recognition.

            “Kom.”  Renata led the overwhelmed soldier to a cylinder along the riverbank.  Two people huddled together.  Slave labourers were denied access to German bomb shelters.  Her friends Cesia and Shimon cowered inside.  Renata spoke to them in Polish and gently coaxed them out.

 The G.I. brought the three young people to American Military Government headquarters, to Chaplain Hasselkorn.  Chaplain Hasselkorn promptly ejected a German couple from a nearby apartment, and bequeathed the space to Cesia, Shimon, and Renata.  Now they were standing at the apartment entrance.

 “Hi!”  The driver winked.  “You guys ready?”

            Cesia, Shimon, and Renata glanced at each other.  Cesia wore a dress, and Shimon, a suit, that Renata had “requisitioned” from the closet of the departing German couple.  Renata wore a dyed white coat over her own dress, which she had converted from a khaki-coloured American army blanket.  Designated the group’s spokesman, Renata stepped up and responded, “Och Kay!  Ve ready!”

            “Well hop in!”  The driver thumbed towards the back of the jeep.  Renata turned to her companions, showing off her constantly expanding English vocabulary.  “Okie Dokie.  Let’s go!”

            Carefully, Shimon lifted Cesia into the jeep.  She was carrying his child.  Renata followed, carrying the bouquet she had assembled from the contents of the flowerbed in front of the old Rathaus.

*                                             *                                     *

 

 

The G.I.s drove out of the city and onto the Autobahn, to Heidelberg.  Heidelberg had been unharmed on orders from General Eisenhower because he planned to install his headquarters there.  Jewish G.I.s had stumbled upon a tiny synagogue in a narrow lane in Old Heidelberg that, curiously, was still standing.  The jeep clattered over the cobblestones of the ancient town, and rode up to it.  Inside, a buffet table was heaped with doughnuts and cold cuts and pretzels and jelly beans and Wrigley’s chewing gum and O’Henry chocolate bars, and wine, and beer, and Ginger Ale and Coca Cola, and Florida oranges the size of sunsets.  The G.I.s had obtained the food in much the same manner as Renata had obtained the bouquet.

            Renata and her companions gaped.  They had not seen such a feast in six years.  “Take a load off.  Relax!”  While the soldiers added final touches to the table, Renata and her companions sat on the synagogue steps, and waited.  An hour later, a canvas truck, flanked by a jeep, rumbled up the road.  Chaplain Hasselkorn, accompanied by a pair of United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration workers, leapt out and pulled the canvas aside.  Wraith-like apparitions began to stir.  The U.N.N.R.A. workers stretched out their arms, and skeletal hands latched onto them.  Laboriously these specters limped off the truck, their steps tentative and unsteady, like pencils attempting to walk.  They’d been liberated from their striped camp uniforms, deloused, scraped clean, and then dressed in an assortment of ill-fitting and mismatched clothes.  One by one, the figures filed off the back of the truck.  There were thirty of them; all men.  They were confronted by a shy young couple almost as emaciated as they were, and a grinning teenager cradling a long-stemmed bouquet in her arms.  She was robust and rosy-cheeked, having already benefited by Seventh Army largesse.  Instinctively, the silhouettes knew.  Amchu?”  They whispered, to the couple, and the girl. 

            Amchu,” the three affirmed.  One of us…There were still Jews in the world. There were still Jewish women.  Their own women had been wrenched from them at the first selection. Was there a wife or a sister who had been spared?  Were such miracles possible?  How?

 Rabbi Hasselkorn led the congregation into the synagogue.  Shimon and Cesia were pronounced man and wife.

 

After the ceremony, the congregation gathered around the buffet table.  The bridal couple, the maid of honour, and the guests, in a daze, exchanged tales of survival.  Tears, dammed for years, flowed like champagne.  The men were Polish Jews from a town called Radom.  They had been deported together and survived, together.  Five weeks earlier they were liberated at Vaihingen by the French.  They had been placed in a village near Neuenberg, and were beginning to recover.  However, the French commander in charge of the village had received orders to transfer them to a Polish D.P. camp, and he was concerned about the treatment Jewish survivors were likely to receive there.  He approached Chaplain Hasselkorn, who approached a Jewish lieutenant from Chicago, who succeeded in having the Radomer Jews transferred to the American zone because his superior looked away.

The Radomer Jews were currently housed in an ancient castle down the road.  The lieutenant had evicted squatting Germans, Ukrainians, and Latvians, had the castle cleaned, and the Radomer Jews moved into Schloss Langenzelle.  Now they were attending a wedding reception.  Only those capable of digesting solids, and strong enough to stand, had been invited to the wedding.  The flesh of oranges, peeled by trembling fingers, erupted like sunbursts.  Doughnuts, sprinkled with real sugar, sparkled like jewels on reverently held paper plates.  The men shuffled, with their treasures, to the wooden benches in the center of the room.  One of their number, a young man called Kaddish, moved to the front, to where the bimah had once been.  Without prompting, without accompaniment, he sang Kol Nidre.   “All personal vows we are likely to make, all personal oaths and pledges we are likely to take between this Yom Kippur and the next Yom Kippur, we publicly renounce.  Let them all be relinquished and abandoned, null and void, neither firm nor established.  Let our personal vows, pledges and oaths be considered neither vows nor pledges nor oaths.”   

  As Kaddish’ clear tenor filled the hall, the gathering grew hushed.  Heads were bent in contemplation; shoulders were stooped in sorrow.  Kaddish concluded the prayer.  Palms plunged into eye sockets as if, by so doing, they could press out memory.

Slowly the congregation rose and moved outside, into the courtyard.  The sky was silver.  The stones glistened.  It was drizzling.  An U.N.R.R.A. worker pulled out a Leica camera.

 “O.K. Gang.  One for the album.” 

The congregation arranged itself into three rows: Shimon and Cesia in the middle, with Rabbi Hasselkorn standing next to the bride.  The front row was kneeling.  Renata perched on a soldier’s lap.  Kaddish sat on the damp earth, next to her.  Renata would meet him again, in Canada, at her own wedding.  He would become her brother-in-law.  The U.N.R.R.A. worker aimed the lens.

  “Come on everybody.  SMILE.”

            The group gazed into the May mist.  Beyond their vision lay a maze of roofs caught between the river and the hills. They stared out from this fairytale town, nestled within a gorge, untouched by horror, atrocity, nor even time.  The mountains hung on the horizon, and a train chugged along the banks of the Neckar: the trains…the trains…The group stared into an open future and, bravely, smiled.

About the author

S. Nadja Zajdman is a Canadian author. In 2022 she published the memoir I Want You To Be Free (Hobart Books, Oxford) as well as the story collection The Memory Keeper (Bridgehouse Publishing, Manchester) 

 

Did you enjoy the story? Would you like to shout us a coffee? Half of what you pay goes to the writers and half towards supporting the project (web site maintenance, preparing the next Best of book etc.)

No comments:

Post a Comment