THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 22 Friday, August 21, 1981 Elie Wiesel's 'Testament' of Timeless Jewish Torture in Russia By BETTE ROTH Elie Wiesel is perhaps history's most articulate witness to the Holocaust. In over a dozen novels and countless essays, interviews and addresses, he has shared with•us his intense, exquisite pain. In "The Tes- tament" (Summit Books), Wiesel turns his attention to yet another Jewish tragedy, Stalin's senseless execution of Russia's finest Jewish poets and novelists DURING THE MONTH OF SEPTEMBER THE JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER IS OFFERING A "FALL" INTO SHAPE WOMEN'S HEALTH CLUB SPECIAL FOR ONLY $ 2 5°° ILO Per person on Aug. 12, 1952. Paliel Kossover, the hovel's central character, is a Yiddish poet. The title of the work refers to his "Tes- tament," an autobiography written in the form of a con- fession to crimes against the state, crimes never articu- lated for_ him. He was in- carcerated from 1949 to 1952 and went to his death never knowing just exactly what he had in fact done. His story is quiet and he moves forward slowly. He tells us of his passive post- ure in his quasi-conversion from Judaism to Com- munism, in his fight against Franco in the Spanish Civil War, in his sojourn in Paris and in his reluctant return to Russia during World War II. Kossover, a fictionalized character, can be seen as a composite of all of the Yid- dish artists who fell victim to Stalin's rage: His inabil- NIMArrv - JOIN ANY DAY IN SEPTEMBER FOR 30 DAYS.. • FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, CALL MEMBERSHIP DEPARTMENT 661-1000 Ext. 166 ONE TRIAL MEMBERSHIP. PER 12 MONTH PERIOD LIMITED TO THE FIRST 60 REGISTRANTS the Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit 6600 West Maple Road • West Bloomfield BETTE ROTH IN THE KNOW... Posh new Athletic Club opens in Southfield. SOUTHFIELD, MICH. —The ExeCutive Athletic Club located in the Traveler s Tower is proof positive that the latest in athletic facilities can be successfully con- tained in an elegant atmosphere. Racquet- ball and squash courts, exercise gyms, whirl- pool and saunas, all in tasteful social sur- roundings. Come see for yourself. To set a tour, please call 354-8080. EXECUTIVE ATHLETIC CLUB 103 TRAVELERS TOWER • 26555 EVERGREEN • SOUTHFIELD, MI 48076 • (313) 354-8080 ity to guide his own destiny in concert with the bland- ness of his recollections are not unique personality quirks. They are, rather, examples of the "ideal" Soviet citizen in a country which tries to mold and meld her multi-ethnic, multi-national citizens into a dull group of obedient ser- vants to the system. The reader feels the tedium and lack of motiva- tion a Soviet citizen surely mustleel. Wiesel purposely draws out seemingly incon- sequential events to achieve this ambiance. But Kossover expresses his anger in his poetry. This seems to be his only outlet for authenticity. He cannot live in the day-to-day world with anything other than resignation. A central motif of the novel is an "involuntary" si- lence. Kossover's son, Grisha, is mute, the result of a freak accident. Kos- sover is sentenced to months of solitary silence when even speaking aloud if only to himself, is met with severe punishment. He tells us that his punishment one of the many inflicted upon him, is the ultimate torture. Soon the mind loses the ability to visualize words, to think in language, the criti- cal difference between beast and human being. Thought is cast into a boundless void. Wiesel's ability to bring the reader into that experi- ence proclaims his genius as a writer. The terror of that torture lingers long after the novel has ended. The silence is symbolic as well. Grisha can only listen to,or read about the horror of his father's story. He is unable to respond with any- thing other than silence. And both he and his father represent all of Russia's Jews, her "Jews of Silence" as Wiesel has so eloquently named them. They can wit- ness the terror but those who cry out are exiled. The Holocaust was a tragedy in black and white with remembrance trans- formed into vivid, if terri- ble, color, A spectacle of horror seen and reseen, told and retold, read and reread by the world's Jews, it was the psychic shock, the trauma that changed the collective consciousness of a people. Many Jews in Russia re- mained beyond the reaches of Hitler's horrors, either as members of the Soviet army or as partisans in Russia's underground. Some escaped simply by moving east more quickly than the German army. But the terror they encountered, recounted in the pages of "The Testa- ment," was perhaps even more frightening than the Holocaust. This Russian terror was not a sudden 12-year paroxysm of a madman on the loose but is the slow, steady, routinous sen- selessness of a bureaucracy, the Soviet apparatus, a gov- ernment whose foundations rest on fear. "The Testament" recalls 300 years of pogroms and purges, tortures both physi- cal and psychic, which began for the Russian Jew with the Chmelnicki mas- sacres of 1648. The Soviet system is, for the Jew, a rep- lication of past history. The year 1952 was but one more betrayal in a his- tory filled with short-lived- acceptance and sudden bet- rayal. And as we focus upon an event almost 30 years old, we are uneasy. We think of Shcharansky, Nudel and others and we wonder if they too will be forced to tell their story as a "written" testament. Or will they be able to break that dreadful barrier of si- lence before it becomes past history to be remembered only in inactive anger. "The Testament" is an eloquent description of the dual nature of man and of the "banality or evil." Wiesel deals not only with the victim, Kossover the Jew, but with the-collective perpetrator, members of the Soviet system of bureauc- racy. He finds their motiva- tion and rationale utterly banal. Even the direct partici- pants in the torture tell us that "they were only follow- ing orders." Wiesel im- plicitly tells us that the Russian experience is but an extension of the Holocaust. C.1_ ‘ ELIE WIESEL of Job, of Elie Wiesel. An__ the title gains profound sig- nificance when we recall that the Old Testament is, after all, a chronicle of the individual Hebrew, Iraelite, Jew in his continuing dialogue with his Creator, an oral communication however, which addresses the problems of injustice and evil. "The Testament" is. in a sense, the continua- . tion of that story. Wiesel seems to find no "rational" rationale nor does he see a satisfactory ending. Russia's senseless system afflicts all of the citizens in that vast land mass. But for the Jew and for Elie Wiesel, this novel is just one more chapter in a long Jewish story of incomprehensible and profound grief. And Wiesel, the ultimate polemicist, should be praised for his masterful ability to motivate a secure American Jewish commu- nity to go beyond the Holocaust in our anger and rage. His story commands our attention; he compels us to act. He seems to be telling us that only by listening to that terrible Russian si- lence and then by exhibit- ing the same anger and rake evoked by the ,memories of the Holocaust can we truly honor the Six Million who perished. His novel is an implicit call to action in behalf of the Russian Jew today, caught yet behind a barrier of si- lence in a labyrinth of un- predictable and inexplica- ble madness. HIAS Honors UN Official NEW YORK — Michael Novak, U.S. Representative to the UN Human Rights Commission, will receive the Liberty Award of HIAS (the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society) at a dinner Sept. 20. in New York. Novak is the 14th reci- pient of the award, which is given to individuals "who have made a substantir contribution to the furthe, ante of peace and freedom in the world." Novak made world headlines earlier this year following his inau- gural speech at the Feb- ruary session of the Human Rights Commission in Geneva. In that address, Ambassador Novak spoke of his "shock" on hearing within the commission "so much hatred, so many lies, such squalid racism, such But the novel transcends despicable anti-Semitism — a specific person,or event. It all in the sacred name of is the story of Ecclesiastes, human rights." T