Goldstein, Merkel and
Biegański
by
Michal
Karski
"What's in a
name?" asks Juliet in Shakespeare's famous play. The answer must be: "much
more than one would at first suppose, my lovely innocent idealist." Just
as a picture is said to be worth a thousand words, so a single name, whether it
be first name or last name, will usually conjure up many associations. In the
case of citizens of Poland, names can often lead to hasty generalisations, if
not to immediate and frequently damning judgements.
The trio pictured
above, as any sharp-eyed reader who is familiar with pre-war Polish radio will
know, is not that of Goldstein, Merkel and Biegański, but they could quite easily
have been. Radio and theatre and the arts in general were the milieus in inter-war Poland where ethnic
prejudices were for the most part quite irrelevant and where regional and
ethnic variety only enriched the sum total of Polish cultural life. One has
only to think of the Yiddish humour of the szmonces
written by people such as Marian Hemar
and broadcast by Lwów
radio station "Lwowska Fala". Piłsudski himself was said to have been
a big fan of the station's brand of humour.
That Jews were often
involved in theatrical life is reflected in Jack Benny's 1942 film "To Be
or Not To Be" – a release quite daring in its day, because the outcome of
the war was by no means a foregone conclusion – and which was successfully
remade by Mel Brooks in the eighties. Although my own opinion is that this is a
pro-Polish film – in both original and remake – since its Polish protagonists
are presented in a sympathetic light, nevertheless there has been criticism
which pointed out that the Polish foreign office officials are portrayed as
cravenly wanting to appease Germany by refusing to sanction an anti-Nazi satire
in a Warsaw theatre.
There is some justice
in this criticism, but if films were permitted footnotes, then a little bit of
extra information would reveal that the Polish government was indeed under
pressure from its western Allies who insisted that Poland should avoid doing
anything which would antagonize Hitler. The people exerting this pressure on
Poland have largely managed to distance themselves from this uncomfortable
truth and Poland's belated mobilization in the face of the German assault has
often been characterized as the result of governmental chaos alone, with no
diplomatic input from Whitehall or the Quai d'Orsay.
As for the name
Goldstein, many readers will know that the name was chosen not so long ago by
German broadcaster ZDF for one of the five protagonists of its controversial TV
series "Generation War" ("Our Mothers, Our Fathers"). I
reviewed it at the Krakow
Post.
It might seem
churlish to suggest that ZDF could have been a bit more creative in its choice
of names for its Jewish character. Then again, the same comment could be made
about the name Kowalski as used by Tennessee Williams. "What's in a name?"
asks Juliet. "A quick and handy shortcut, my beloved," Romeo might
well have replied, "to an entire nation".
The second name in
the list above is, of course, immediately associated with that of the current
German chancellor. As an aside, it might be of interest to know that Angela
Merkel has recently discovered that there was a Polish connection in her
family, but the clearly German name Merkel in the title of this piece belongs
to a Polish citizen, quite possibly of German descent, but no less patriotic
for being so.
It need hardly be
stressed that not all Polish nationals who bore German surnames were either Volksdeutsche or at least suspect in
their allegiance to the state – one has only to think of army heroes such as
Anders or Fieldorf – just as not all Poles who bore clearly Jewish surnames
were Bolshevik fifth columnists or those with Ukrainian or Lithuanian surnames
would have been happy to see the demise of the Polish Republic. Unfortunately
stereotypes persist to this day.
The mention of
stereotype brings me neatly to the third in the trio: that of Biegański, the
name chosen by William Styron for his repellent, German-sympathizing, extreme nationalist
character who is the father of Sophie in "Sophie's Choice" and who
also gives his name to the blog you are reading and the book
by Danusha Goska about stereotypes. Nowadays a rather classless ethnically
Polish surname, it has no particular connotations of either aristocracy nor
does it suggest any rural provenance; if anything, it is probably associated
with the szlachta, the minor nobility
of Poland.
I should now elaborate
not only on my choice of illustration above but I should also offer an
explanation for the choice of the three names in the title. May I say that
since I have no photos of the trio of Goldstein, Merkel and Biegański – who
were real people and all Polish citizens – I chose instead to show a photo of Alfred Schütz (composer of the famous Czerwone maki na Monte Cassino), Włada
Majewska and Wiktor Budzyński, who were performers at the hugely popular above-mentioned
radio station "Lwowska Fala". They are pictured here in Kraków in
1936.
And, you may ask, what
about the names in the title? Anyone who has read my previous columns will not
be surprised at the revelation that the names Goldstein, Merkel and Biegański –
quite clearly not chosen at random – belong to Poles who were victims of the Second
World War.
Would the three have
known each other before the war? Possibly. They might have been a firm of
lawyers, for instance, in Warsaw or in Kraków's Kazimierz district. Would they
have socialized before the war? Again, quite possibly. Warsaw and Kraków and
other cities were cosmopolitan centres. Contrary to the picture suggested by
works such as Lanzmann's epic "Shoah", Poland was not exclusively
mired in medieval ignorance and superstition or totally in thrall to backward
clerics. It was precisely the cosmopolitan and progressive elements which were
targeted for elimination by both Nazis and Soviets when they partitioned the
country between them. Goldstein, Merkel and Biegański, citizens and patriots,
might have been names found on the lists of victims of Auschwitz or Majdanek or
any other of the death camps constructed by the Third Reich on Polish soil.
Instead, Second Lieutenant
Salomon Goldstein, reserve officer Zygmunt Merkel, and Lieutenant Tadeusz Biegański
were just three individuals among the thousands of Polish army officers who
were murdered by Stalin's NKVD at the killing grounds of Katyń.
Farewell and rest in
peace, Goldstein, Merkel, and Bieganski, martyred soldiers and representatives
of a vanished world, and to borrow from Horatio in Shakespeare's Hamlet, may
flights of angels sing you to your rest.
Hello,
ReplyDeleteNice review, Mr Karski.
In responses You have mentioned that Stanisław Aronson wrote to Washington Post. I couldn't find that comment. Maybe I was looking under the wrong article.
Anne Applebaum wrote an article in the Washington Post entitled "FBI Chief got it wrong on the Holocaust". There were about four thousand comments under the article. Mr Aronson's is somewhere in the middle, if I remember rightly.
ReplyDeleteSorry. 2415 comments precisely. And thanks for the compliment.
DeleteHello Mr Karski,
DeleteI found that comment. Mr Aronson mentioned his biography. For those who might be interested, the book is titled "Years of turmoil".
http://www.amazon.com/YEARS-OF-TURMOIL-Patrycja-Bukalska-ebook/dp/B005N8X4SO
In polish it's "Rysiek z Kedywu. Niezwykłe losy Stanisława Aronsona".
I haven't read it yet. It dissapered from the shelves of bookstores in no time. Found one in the library. I'm on the waiting list.
I've seen a documentary movie about him.
http://www.polishdocs.pl/en/films/1102/the_golfer
May God bless that man. He's a true hero.
I will second your last sentence.
ReplyDeleteAnd many thanks for your patient search through the many comments.
"Your last line" I should have said...
Delete