"Do Not Speak Ill of the Dead:"
The Difficulty in Treating Polish Jews as
Ordinary Humans
Anne Karpf
wrote of the difficulties she faced whenever she felt any discomfort with her
parents. "Hating one's parents is a necessary stage of childhood, like
becoming potty-trained. We bypassed it. How could you hate those who'd already
been hated so much?" Whenever Karpf was a naughty daughter, others
reminded her, "Remember what she's been though." Karpf resented this.
"I came to abominate what she'd been through no longer on her account, but
on ours" (Karpf 38). Karpf's parents' status as virtuous victims defined
her as something else. "Their world had been split into good and bad: if
you weren't one, you must be the other" (Karpf 40). And virtuous victims
they had to be.
It's hard to
speak about Holocaust survivors in anything but a reverent tone or without
turning their suffering into a sacrament. People expect of them abnormally high
standards of behavior, as if a dehumanizing experience might somehow dignify
and elevate, and along with their worldly goods, they should also have lost all
worldliness. (Karpf 249)
One of the
barriers to seeing Bieganski as a stereotype, rather than an accurate representation
of reality, is the romanticization of pre-Holocaust Polish Jewish culture,
typified by elite authors like Sholem Aleichem, source of the stories on which Fiddler
on the Roof was based, and the post-Holocaust, Margaret-Mead-inspired, Life
is with People. In them, Poland's Jews are depicted as saintly. By
extension, and through application of The Law of Two to a Scene and The Law of Contrast,
these works militate against their large audiences seeing Poland's non-Jews as
anything but Bieganski. David Roskies summed up this popular understanding.
"Jews danced and prayed all day until the Cossacks came and burned the
place down" (18). Antony Polonsky pointed out that "Examples of …
elevated nostalgia could easily be multiplied." He quoted that of prominent
American rabbi, Abraham Joshua Heschel.
The little Jewish communities in Eastern Europe were like sacred texts opened before the eyes of God, so close were the houses of worship to Mount Sinai. In the humble wooden synagogues, looking as if they were deliberately closing themselves off from the world, the Jews purified the souls that God had given them and perfected their likeness to God…Even plain men were like artists who knew how to fill weekday hours with mystic beauty. (Polonsky "Shtetl")...
Read the rest of this passage in Bieganski the Brute Polak StereotypeRead the full New York Times article about the documentary film here.
There was a 2014 documentary https://www.timesofisrael.com/new-film-exhibit-gives-moving-glimpse-of-pre-wwii-jewish-poland/
ReplyDeleteWikipedia about the 'Holocaust in Poland'. "after the last "Holocaust in Poland" case was closed, one user, who is an Associate professor of history of the Holocaust related topics in one US university, contacted me and asked for my comments on this case. From that conversation, I got an impression that scholarly community is dissatisfied with the way the Holocaust related topics are covered in some English Wikipedia articles. Maybe, it makes sense to ask that user to comment here, because her expertise may be instrumental. " Even the name 'Holocaust in Poland' misinforms,because there was no 'Poland' at that time and some ignorants accuse 'Poland' to participate in the Holocaust.
ReplyDeleteThe NYC Museum of Jewish Heritage has invited Jan Grabowski, the former Polin director Stola and Konstanty Gebert. https://mjhnyc.org/events/rewriting-history-the-politics-of-memory-in-poland/ I am unable to listen to the discussion but written summary is available on twitterOne participant claims he has been 'abruptly kicked out by moderator'.
ReplyDeleteWriter Stefan Wiechecki 'Wiech' has published before the war many short texts about Jewish life in Warsaw, eg. criminal cases. The texts has been used by Scena Lubelska 30/32 theater https://www.polskieradio.pl/10/4886/Artykul/1705117,Zydowska-Warszawa-w-tekstach-Wiecha
ReplyDelete