J EWISH NEWS Kissinger's remarks avoided any men- tion of the horrors that caused his fam- ily to flee. When invited to tour the neighborhood where he used to play soc- cer and study the Torah and face beat- ings by Hitler Youth members, Kissinger politely declined. At least 13 close relatives of Kissinger were sent to the gas chambers or died in concentration camps. One reason so many of them perished is that, as Kissinger has said, they considered themselves loyal German citizens. His grandfather David and granduncle Si- mon both felt that the family should ride out the Nazi era, that it would pass. David did not flee until after Kristall- nacht , when he joined his son Arno in Sweden. But Simon, even after Kristail- nacht , forbade his family to leave. Ger- many, he said, had been good to the Jews. They should stick with the coun- try and be loyal to it as it went through this phase. Simon was killed in a Ger- man concentration camp. So, too, were his sons Ferdinand and Julius. All three of Kissinger's aunts also perished in the Holocaust: Ida and her husband, Sieg- bert Friedmann, who was a teacher in Mainstocken, and one child; Sara and her husband, Max Blattner, and their daughter Selma; Fanny and her hus- band, Jacob Ratt, and their son, Nor- bert. Fanny's daughter, Lina Rau, who had boarded with the Kissingers, man- aged to escape to New York. Louis Kissinger was 50 years old when he arrived in New York with his family. Even though he was well- schooled in English, or perhaps becauie of that, he was afraid of making a gram- matical error and embarrassed by his thick accent. After two years of only spo- radic work, Louis got a low-paying job as a bookkeeper at a factory owned by friends from Germany. It fell to Paula Kissinger to support the family. For a while she worked with a local caterer, preparing and serving food at bar mitzvahs and weddings; then she went into business for herself. F reed from the fear that per- vaded Furth, Henry Kissinger plunged into his new life in Washington Heights with the gusto of a paroled prisoner. Within days he had found his way to Yankee Stadi- um, mastering the intrica- cies of a subtle sport he had never before seen. And in September of 1938, a month after he arrived, Kissinger enrolled in George Washington High School. "He was the most serious and mature of the German refugee students," his math teacher, Anne Sindeband, later told the New York Post, "and I think those students were more serious than our own." The Kissingers belonged to the Congregation K'hal Adath Jeshurun, a fledgling Orthodox syna- gogue that was founded the year they arrived. Kissin- ger, wearing his prayer shawl, was a faithful con- gregant. His mother began to sense, however, that he was going to temple more out of fealty to his father than out of fidelity to his faith. Despite his stubborn re- tention of his Bavarian ac- cent, one trait distinguished Henry Kis- singer from his friends; he was more directed, more Heinz Kissinger, who would later be known as Henry, with his father, Louis, in 1923. ambitious, more serious about assimilating and succeeding in and out. For young men seeking to es- with some of his relatives. "What the America. The others were quite com- cape constricted lives, the army offered hell are they putting out?" he grumbled fortable within their tight-knit German a perfect opportunity, all the more so be- to aides. "My relatives are soap." Despite Kissinger's demurrals, the Jewish world. Many of them, even as cause there was little choice involved. they became successful in business, con- Kissinger's draft notice arrived shortly Nazi atrocities left a lasting imprint on tinued to identify with their ethnic her- after his 19th birthday. In February him. "Kissinger is a strong man, but the itage rather than break from their 1943, he left by train for Camp Croft Nazis were able to damage his soul," immigrant style. Not Kissinger. He was in Spartanburg, South Carolina — where said Fritz Kraemer, a non-Jewish Ger- more eager to blend into society, more for the first time in his life he would not man who left to fight Hitler and became adept at picking up the cultural cues be part of a German Jewish communi- Kissinger's mentor in the U.S. Army. that marked one as an American. "For the formative years of his youth, he ty. When Kissinger graduated from Kissinger rarely spoke of the Holo- faced the horror of his world coming George Washington, he had no prob- caust other than to protest now and then apart, of the father he loved being turned lem getting into the City College of New that it did not leave a permanent scar into a helpless mouse. It made him seek York, where he breezed through his on his personality. "It was not a life-long order, and it led him to hunger for ac- classes. He got As in every course he trauma," he said. "But it had an impact: ceptance, even if it meant trying to took, except for one B in history. With- having lived under totalitarianism, I please those he considered his intellec- out great enthusiasm, he was heading know what it's like." Only once did he tual inferiors." One of Kissinger's insecurities as an toward becoming an accountant, which ever show any signs of anger about what had become his father's field. happened. During an early visit to Ger- adult was his feeling, sometimes half He was, however, looking around for many as national security adviser, Bonn confessed through mordant humor, that something more he could do, a way up announced that Kissinger might visit he would not fit in if he was too closely a