Trivializing the Holocaust

The story materialized in my head a few days before Halloween. A gang of creatures, half-human, half-animal, attack a party of SS men executing a group of Jews. I imagined a young Jewish girl stumbling over tree roots as German soldiers herded her toward a clearing in the Polish woods. I visualized a wolf standing upright, a lean, doglike head, tip-tilted gray eyes, muscular legs encased in the trousers of a Polish military uniform.

The story thumped home with a sense of rightness. Yes, this is good. Yes, this works. All the usual signs were there; the hair raising on the back of my neck, the butterflies flitting in my stomach.

But on its heels, this: Am I trivializing the Holocaust?

My parents are Polish Holocaust survivors. Growing up, I heard the stories of their survival again and again. How my mother hid as a shepherd girl with a Polish farmer. How a Polish neighbor boy who used to play at my father’s house discovered his bunker and betrayed it to the Nazis. How my grandfather made saddles, and how the German he worked for sent a wagon to bring Zaydie and his children to his castle the day before a terrible Aktzia consumed the town.

There are so many books dedicated to Holocaust literature that readers experience a kind of overload. Yes, it was tragic, they say. Yes, millions were murdered. They’ve read Anne Frank. They’ve read Night. They’ve read Maus. They know. They know.

That’s where the challenge lay. What was different about my stories? How was I going to make World War II new again?

The facts of the catastrophe—the obsessive focus on enslavement and extermination of a peaceful civilian population, nightmarish death factories, unthinkable atrocities committed by a cultured European nation—are so impossible, so bizarre, so far-fetched, that they might as well be science fiction. I’ve been to Auschwitz and Majdanek; I’ve walked through those warehouses full of shoes and eyeglasses and hair; I’ve descended into the gas chamber and out again, and even I can’t grasp that it really happened.

My mother’s stories of the Poles and Germans who risked their lives to save her family were just as unbelievable, the men and women bigger than life, transcending reality like characters in a fairy tale. An SS man who hid Jews in his castle, with the power to enchant his superiors; a woman who cooked such lovely breakfasts that they lured away the soldiers searching her barn; timid Torah scholars and Jewish school boys, transformed by the deep and ancient Polish forests into mighty resistance fighters. Throughout my childhood, these people loomed as large as giants. If that’s not magic, I don’t know what is.

What made me turn to myth and magic to recount my parents’ stories? Was it the desire to control the uncontrollable? The need to believe, in a time when God’s face was hidden, that there was some guiding force behind the horror?

Art removes us to a safe distance from actual horrors, allowing us to see what we already know in a new way. Fairy tales entertain children, but they also warn them of danger. In a fable that my fictional author, Toby Rey, composes for his German protector in the title story In the Land of Armadillos, he ends his allegory of a village complicit in a secret crime with this line:

“From that day forward, wherever the townspeople went, they were accompanied by the songs of birds. It filled their lives with beautiful music, but it also reminded them of what they were capable of. Remember, the songs warned them, and do not forget.”
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message 1: by Susan (new)

Susan Pearlstein my father is 90 and fading fast. his generation, who lived through and fought in the war, is almost gone. my husband, who is in his 40s, believes that the United States had NO IDEA there was an extermination of Jews occurring until after the concentration camps were liberated. Sorry to say, we need to be reminded, and reminded again, of what occurred. It is about Jews, but it also about everyone, and what can happen anytime, anywhere. Fairy tales, newspaper accounts, historical fiction, photographs... whatever it takes.


message 2: by Helen (last edited Feb 11, 2016 04:17PM) (new)

Helen Yes, it's about everyone. There's an expression about this--"What begins with the Jews never ends with the Jews." Sadly, the US knew by 1942. A very brave Pole, Jan Karski, had escaped Auschwitz and immediately reported the atrocities to the Allies. It appeared in the New York Times, buried in the back.


message 3: by Scott-robert (new)

Scott-robert Shenkman I don't think that story would trivialize the Shoah. Even having supernatural stories where the supernatural saves people from the Nazis is beneficial. The horrors are there. That's the eternal history. Adding in a different hero/heroine doesn't take anything away from that - it just shows righteousness in a different form. My great aunts tried to conjure a golom to save them. Obviously, it didn't work, but it did happen, and if it had succeeded what a story that would have made.

You mixed the supernatural with the Shoah perfectly in "The Color of Light". The act of love that Rafe did for Sofia's child is probably one of the most devastating things I will read in my entire life. I truthfully cried for hours after reading that part, the gut-wrenching, soul breaking kind of crying that can only come from mourning. It didn't happen in real life. But it so perfectly exemplified the horror of the Shoah in one 3-person family. It terrible, horrible, and indescribably beautiful. If I knew what was coming, I might not have had the courage, the guts to read it. I'm glad I didn't know.

There is a book from 1989 by Robert R. McCammon called "The Wolf's Hour" about a Russian werewolf that fights the Nazis. It doesn't really touch on the camps, but it quite able demonstrates the absolute nightmare that was Nazi Germany and it didn't trivialize that at all.

I love werewolves, and I would love to see you write that story. Even though I shy away from books about the Shoah, I would gobble that up (pun intended?).


message 4: by Helen (new)

Helen Hi, Scott! Good to hear from you!

I definitely worried about it. But I really like your take on it. And thank you for all the wonderful things you said about "The Color of Light."

That book, "The Wolf's Hour," sounds intriguing. I'm going to go look it up. Have you read anything by Lavie Tidhar? He wrote a wonderful World War 2 book called "The Violent Century," which reminded me of X-Men in the best possible way. I think you'd like it.

Lastly, spoiler alert. There's a werewolf in one of the stories in "Armadillos." That's all I'm gonna say.

Best,
Helen


message 5: by Scott-robert (new)

Scott-robert Shenkman Hi Helen,

I bought the new book, but it will probably be a long while before I find the courage to read it. No strength. Both of my parents are dying, and once they pass, I will be the last one of my family. I'm the last possible link to that time of my family than I know of. So right now, when I don't have anywhere to look for hope, I can't go to that place where there was none. I'm sorry.

Best,

Scott


message 6: by Helen (new)

Helen Oh, Scott. I'm so sorry. I understand. Thanks for taking the time to write to me. I'm sending you my warmest wishes.


message 7: by Scott-robert (new)

Scott-robert Shenkman I appreciate that. Hey if we're ever in the same town (cause I don't remember if you're in NY anymore) and you want a collaborator on an epic novel about a pack of Jewish werewolves that take out Nazis ("Inglorious Lycans"?), give me a shout. :)


message 8: by Helen (new)

Helen It's a great idea! I love it!


message 9: by Scott-robert (new)

Scott-robert Shenkman Let's write a Hollywood script and be really famous. :)


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