64 Friday, June 22, 1919 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Dr. Martin About Significance of Bettelheim Essays: Survivors' Life Instinct Sears Conscience of Man BY DR. PETER A MARTIN In deep respect for the feelings of the survivors of that mass murder of Jews called the Holocaust, I feel but partially qualified to write this book review of Bruno Bettelheim's "Sur- Viving and Other Essays" (Knopf). As a psychoanalyst, I am qualified to comment on the psychoanalytic formula- tions made in this selection of essays written by Bruno Bettelheim during the past thirty years. But only a sur- vivor can understand the experience itself. As Bettelheim says, sur- vivors feel exasperated and helpless when others who have not the slightest idea what their experiences were like, hold forth as if they , knew their real meaning. I will attempt to avoid such an error and present what Bettelheim, a survivor of Dachau and Buchenwald as well as a world reknowned child psychologist, presents as the real meaning of these dehumanizing expriences. I am basing most of this review on the essay which I believe is the most impor- tant in the book — "The Holocaust — One Genera- tion Later." It gives not only the deepest understanding, but highlights its signifi- cance for the present gener- ation. Bettelheim bases his understanding on Freud's theory of the presence of a death instinct as well as a life instinct in humans. Al- though Freud's theory of a death instinct has generally not been accepted by psychoanalysts or scientists of other disciplines, its use does lead to a clearer under- standing of the feelings and behavior of the death camp victims. Bettelheim uses two creative writers, them- selves survivors, who search for meaning of these terrible events. Their poetic artistry paints the picture vividly. We can include Bet- telheim himself among the creative writers. He writes beautifully, as illustrated in these essays and by his previous book, "The Uses of Enchant- ment," which won the National Book Award and the National Book Critic's Circle Award in 11,7"_ _ Elie Wiesel is quoted to picture the survivors' reac- tions to the use ofpsycholog- ical defenses by others to avoid facing the upsetting reality of what the extermi- , of the camps, his parents had perished in them. He could not overcome the af- tereffects and commited suicide in 1970. He put the experience that we must try to understand onto one of his poems. What follows is a short excerpt: DR. PETER MARTIN nation of the Jews was all about. "Those who have not lived through the experience will never know, those who have will never tell; not really, not completely. Auschwitz means death, total absolute death — of man and of all people, of language and im- agination, of time and spirit. The survivor knows. He and no one else .. . "The survivors will soon be unwelcome intruders. Their assassins are now in the limelight. People are more interested in their kil- lers. This attitude exists among Jewish and non- Jewish intellectuals alike." Often, Bettelheim states, he has felt that only withdrawal into si- lence will do. But if the survivors remain silent then they perform as the Nazis wanted — behave as if it never did happen. Thus they must speak up so that thoughtful men will develop attitudes to prevent it from ever hap- pening again. What Bettelheim states we must try to understand about this appalling crime of turning Jews into name- less bodies to be destroyed indiscriminately. That they have faced the ulti- mate abyss of the death camps with its unimagina- ble murderous terror. The terror they faced is: the de- structive potentialities in man. The nature and the implications of the death camps cannot be fully grasped by the rest of us if we shy away from facing these destructive poten- tialities in man. German poet Paul Ce- lan's poetry is used to cap- ture the plight of the death camp victims who were "turned into shadows of their former selves, soon to be made into numbers in a hell which never recognized them as persons, but only as nameless bodies to be de- stroyed indiscriminately." Celan had been an inmate "There was earth in them, and they dug. They dug and dug, and thus their day wore on, and their night. And they did not praise God, who, they heard, willed all this who, they heard; knew all this." When Celan received the Buchner Prize, he said "He who walks on his head sees the sky be- neath him like an abyss." Bettelheim explains this statement as being the perspective of those who have earth in them as they dig — while they are still alive, they have al- ready returned to the earth from which they came, as they dig their own graves. "Their perspective is no longer a human one, with the sky above them; all they can perceive is the terror of the abyss." Celan concludes his un- named poem as follows: "Oh someone, oh none, oh no one, oh you: Where did it go, if nowhere it went. Oh you dig and I dig, and I dig myself towards you, And on our finger the ring awakes us." The "you" to whom he re- fers, is you the reader, you the fellow human being. If he digs and you dig towards him, both are awakened by the contact of the fingers which touch. This was not done or the Holocaust might have been prevented. The world refused to listen to the digging of the victims. The mechanism of denial was too strong. The death drive in the Nazi monsters was not recognized or was de- nied. The life drive from humanity around the world was insufficiently activated to touch fingers with the earth diggers. Thus, "the behavior of the Jews; who, without offering resistance, per- mitted themselves to be walked to the gas cham- bers cannot be com- prehended ... without reference to the death tendencies that exist in all of us. "After thelorrible trans- port into the death camps, when confronted with the BRUNO BEITELHEIM gas chambers and cre- matoria, the life drives in the Jews, who were de- prived of everything that had given them security, robbed of all hope for them- selves and, worst of all, des- erted by the entire world, were no longer able to keep their death drive in bounds. But in their case, the death tendencies were not di- rected outside, against others, but turned inward, against the self." America and its President were as guilty as any other country in the sin of omission. No one cared. Had there been concern abroad, the Nazis would have had to stop their ex- termination of the Jews. Never again should Jews be allowed to feel the des- perate cry of the poet "Oh someone" and have "no one" respond. This is the respon- sibility which Jews must take for each other. How pathetically far we are from that ideal. How deaf many Jews are to the lesson de- lineated in this book and many other publications. The material is not new. I repeat it in this re- view because it is so eas- ily forgotten. And what a horrible price is ulti- mately paid by the vic- tims when the path of least resistance is fol- lowed and the mechanism of denial is utilized to avoid the pain of the truth. I have not responded to essays on other themes be- cause to do so would blunt the point of the meaning of the survivors' experiences and their themes pale in significance. Also, when I read the book for the first time, my mind led to how the term survivors seems to minimize what many of them have since accom- plished. To call them heroes would give a more accurate picture of what they were and what they are. The work of men like Bet- telheim, Elie Wiesel and Simon Wiesenthal illus- trates the creative potential of the life instinct that re- sides in man. However, at- tention to this important part of human nature in- furiates some survivors. Efforts to make the sur- vivors appear as unusual, most superior persons draws attention away from the millions who were mur- dered. With this, I agree. Despite my great respect for many of my friends and patients who have contrib- uted so much since leaving the concentration camps and despite my personal de- sire to stress the victories of Eros over Thanatos, I won't. By implying that the death camps produced superior beings as sur- vivors, all of our interest would be focused on the su_ vival of a lucky few, at the cost of neglecting the mil- lions who were slaughtered. As the division psychiatrist of an Infantry Division in World War II, that walked into the stench of Nor- dhausen, when it was aban- doned by the retreating Nazis, I could not desecrate the memory of the smell of the dead. They were stacked on top of one another as if they were logs of wood. The dying were an emaciated collection of skin and bone. Their eyes, sunk deeply into their sockets, seared a wound in my conscience that will never heal. It fights successfully against the use of the mechanism of denial of the lesson to be learned from the experiences of the sur- vivors. Their lesson must never be lost. Can you, the reader, commit yourself to this cause? Please think about it. Compromise Sought to Halt Feud Between Chief Rabbis By MOSHE RON The Jewish News Special Israel Correspondent TEL AVIV — The Israeli population has become ac- customed to the clashes be- tween the two chief rabbis, Shlomo Goren and Ovadia Yosef. If one of them orders "kosher," the other one claims "treife," If Chief Rabbi Goren maintains that according to the Torah, Is- rael must not give up the territories of Judea and Samaria, Chief Rabbi Yosef says that for a peace Israel is allowed to do so. In most questions, includ- ing nominating rabbis to the rabbinical courts, the two chief rabbis are at loggerheads. Because of these quarrels it was impossible for years to hold elections for new chief rabbis. Last time, the elections had to be post- poned at the last minute be- cause there was a chance that the new Ashkenazi chief rabbi would be a can- didate of the Sephardi Chief Rabbi Ovadia Yosef. The Knesset ordered a post- ponement of the elections for a year in order to try and find a compromise. Minister for Religious Affairs Ahron Abu- Hatzeira has prepared a compromise: A division of the office of chief rabbi and of president of the Rabbinical High Court. Today the two chief rab- bis fulfill both missions. Under the compromise the two chief rabbis would be elected for a period of 10 years, but alternate five- year terms as chief rabbi and president of the Court. The two chief rabbis have rejected this formula. Ac- cording to the law the elec- tions should take place in three months, but it appears that they will be postponed again. - In the meantime, there are no rabbis and members of the rabbinical court in some towns and villages. According to the law, local rabbis are to be nominated by the two chief rabbis. Abu-Hatzeira tried to make peace between the two chief rabbis and find a way for nominating 15 new members of the rE0- - binical courts. WE- these efforts failed, irk- -chose 15 members out of 40 candidates. The two chief rabbis had to confirm them, but no "peace-agreement" could be achieved. The dispute has affected the appointment of new rabbis, and consequently, the supervision of kashrut. Some hotels are beginning to circumvent the strict kashrut laws because of a lack of supervision. The government has ap- pointed a special Cabinet committee to arrange a peace between the chief rabbis and hold the rabbini- cal elections.