.s 0 0 0 -W 8B - The Michigan Daily - Weekend Magazine - Thursday, March 7, 2002 The Michigan Daily - Weekend Magazil AN ULIKELY NAZI BY JENNIFERM ISRA TIam twenty-seven years old and I still wake up in the middle of the night, tofind sweat, mixed with tears, streaking down my face as I try to forget what I know to be the truth. The words my wife hoarsely whispers in the dead of the night offer no solace either. I can, not escape it. So far, my attempts to forget have failed miserably. As children, my mother pushed us to write what we know, a fairly sim- ple request. With the wisdom of years, I have discovered what you know may not always be the truth and the truth may not be what you know. And over time, what I know has become my truth, my reality, my life. I know this much. It was a brisk September day, common for Central Poland, when the Nazis came storming through my grandfathers small town. Hirshel Stein was barely twelve when he watched his baby bother beaten by the Nazis. His beloved, elderly grandfather was shot by an unremorseful solider just a few minutes later. As the cattle cars pulled away from the town, Hirshel s eyes were stuck on the dead bodies that covered the dirt roads. During the long and tiring ride, Hirshel kept to himself, creating an imaginary barrier between himself and the others in his car. His parents had boarded a different car; they had lost their son in the madness the damn Nazis caused. They lost everything in that uproar. Hirshel watched as others screamed in fear and demanded the cars to stop. He watched children cling to their parents, wives clutch the arms of their husbands, terrified of what might happen to them if they let go. Hirshel worked himself into the corner of the car. His small body curled up into a ball and he made no noise. He did not move until the car stopped at Dachau. Almost an eternity later, the cars came to a bumpy stop. Masses flowed out of the car and breathed in the fresh air they had been deprived of during their trip. Nazis stood before them, screaming out orders. They were to form a single file line and go in the direction they were told. By this time, his parents found him. As they approached the Nazis, his mother began to sing Hirshel the Yiddish lullaby she had sung to him as a baby. The Nazis split up my grandfather and his parents. Each one followed a different path the apathetic Nazi pointed toward. Later, Hirshel would learn that his mother, pregenant with her third child, was sent immedi- ately to her death in the infamous gas chambers the Nazis had so crafti- ly created. His father was put to work right away at the camp. Hirshel escaped both labor and death; the Nazis sent him to eat. They recognized the potential in his small body and knew what he was capable of if he was nurtured properly. Over the course of the next few months, both Hirshel and his father did what they were ordered. They saw each other occasionally. Neither mentioned the possible fate of Hirshel s mother. Over time, Hirshel saw his father less and less, until he had disappeared forever when he was sent to Auschwitz. For the course of his stay at Dachau, my grandfather kept to himself. He didn t look for trouble. He kept his tiny area clean, he stood tall, and ate as little as possible to survive. He was determined to survive the camp alive. He was willing to do anything to keep his life. Hirshel s efforts did not go unnoticed. Roughly nine months after his arrival, a solider approached him during one of the typical late night roundups. Dozens of Jewish men stood outside in the icy night. They were feeble and tired. They had lost all their strength the minute they stepped onto the train that brought them to the Nazi s camps. As always my grandfather stood by himself, at the end of the long line of men. The Nazi stopped when he reached him. You, he hollered loudly. No heads turned to look. Hirshel did not respond. Look at me dirty Jew! Hirshel lifted his head, avoiding eye contact with the solider. The Nazi asked his name and hometown. When he did not recognize the name of the town, he grabbed Hirschel s wrist and studied the number that would be forever imprinted on his arm. Upon his request, Hirshel followed the solider to a room filled with Nazis. The solider spoke quickly in German, a language Hirshel would never learn or understand. Another Nazi rose from his seat and took Hirshel outside. Do you want to die Jew? My grandfather shook his head, remembering the dead bodies in his village. Listen. We have been watching you carefully. You show promise. You will live if you help us. It is very simple Jew. You will continue to sleep in the same barrack. You are excused from your labor duties. Each day you will report here. You will tell its about the Jew s What they think, what they say. You will inform us of their plans to escape. You will become our eyes and ears. If you do as you re told, there will not be a problem. If you listen to us, your life will be spared. Do you understand Jew? The boy nodded in agreement, surprised at his ability to control his emotions. He could live through this disaster. The Nazi s words echoed in Hirshel s head each morning when he got out of bed. He befriended all the men in his barrack. He became a confidant. The seasons chap After all, he was one of them, wasn t he? Hirshel listened as the men went from Hirshei promised to avenge to Nazis, as the Jews swore they would track down the had been reduced Nazis wives and beat them and rape them until their skull cracked open and Hirshel no longer bled everywhere. He listened as they Hefo this dreamt of simple things, buttered toast, He IroJI Poll a candle, hot water. the grwi erm Hirshel participated in the nightly growing Ierni discussions. Each day he would report visited the camp, back to the Nazis, telling them what his barrackmates hated the most, what they for his duties and wanted, and so on. The Nazis listened, carefully. They needed Hirshel to fully replace the yellow torment the Jews. He was able to tell them information and details they could long ago never uncover on their own. Hirshel watched men die every day, knowing with a perverse pleasure that a Nazi would never beat him to death. He was too vital to them. He watched men cry out from starvation, know- ing that a hearty meal was not far off. He had crossed a line that few oth- ers had. The seasons changed. Men came and went from Hirshel s barrack. His parents had been reduced to hazy memories. Hirshel no longer saw him- self as a Jew. He forgot his Polish heritage and praised the growing German Empire. When Hitler visited the camp, Hirshel was commend- ed for his duties and given a Swastika to replace the yellow star he had received long ago. As history 'has taught its students, the Nazis luck ran out. So did Hirshel s. American troops arrived at the camp before dawn one morn- ing and immediately attacked the Nazi quarters of the camp. Whoever wasn t shot was arrested and immediately sent back to the nearest American base. Naturally, the Americans were unaware of Hirshel and shipped him and the other prisoners to a Red Cross Center, and later to a Displaced Persons Camp. Hirshel left his prized Swastika at Dachau, terrified of what would happen to him if anyone learned of his status. He watched others and imitated their fear and pain. For the rest of his life, Hirshel was an actor. It was in the Displaced Persons Camp that Hirshel rediscovered his Jewish heritage. Like the others, he stood in one of the many long lines, waiting for information to link him to another human in the world. She was standing in the line next to my grandfather. She seemed stronger than any other Jew in the room. Her hair radiated in the dingy light and her eyes sparkled as they wandered aimlessly through the room. After Hirshel received a slip of paper with a name scribbled across it, he made his way over to the girl. Not knowing where she came from, he spoke Yiddish, the native tongue of everyone there. They spoke briefly, making polite conversa- tion. Finally Hirshel asked her where she was:going. He smiled when she said America, claiming that he too had distant relatives there. When he laughed that his family was also in Los Angeles, the woman smiled. My grandfather sailed to the United States on the same boat as the woman. Some time between docking in New Orleans and the leaving by train for Los Angeles, he asked her to be his wife. She accepted, and they stayed with her uncle. It wasn t until their oldest child graduated high school that Hirshel revealed to his wife that he was supposed to go to London to stay with an elderly cousin. My grandmother didn t mind. For the next fifty years, my grandfather worked twelve hour days, seven days a week, determined to provide for his family,'to give them everything he envisioned came with the American dream. He was stern with his three children, often reminding them of the hardships he had endured under the Nazis. He and his bride Anne told them selected details of the cruelty they witnessed in the Old World, so that they would remember and pass the stories onto their own children someday. My grandfather was a small man with gray hair and a weak stomach. He was a chain smoker who never left the house without a hat covering his silver hair. He always had gifts for my sisters and me. He called on our birthdays and gave us piggyback rides. When my family went to California for the holidays, my grandfather would take my sisters and- me to Disneyland, bringing us home with our bellies stuffed with junk and our arms filled with souvenirs. Just following my youngest sisters Bat Mitzvah, my grandfather received an official letter from the Israeli government ordering him to come to Jerusalem immediately. He had been charged with crimes against humanity. In Israel, Hirshel was forced to testify at a Nazi s trial, admitting that he had been an accomplice in the soldiers actions. My grandmother called my mother in tears, telling her to come to Israel. Hirshel was sen- tenced to life in prison The last time I saw him, we were separated by a piece of glass. My family was not allowed to touch him. He did not look Nazi. Hirshel did not look like a man that would go against his identity to save himself. He had always been the most unselfish person I had known. As I said my goodbye to the man I wor- ed. Men came and shipped my entire life, I noticed that like all the despi- s barrack. His parents cable Nazis, my grandfather showed no emotion, no regret to hazy memories. for his terrible actions. He had become one of raw himself as a Jew. them. He was a Nazi. ,h heritage and praised I was twenty-four when my tpraised grandfather was locked up in Empire. When Hitler forever. My mother went to Los Angeles with my grand- oirsel was commended mother to dispose of all remaining traces of my given a Swastika to grandfather. Everything was neatly packed away in boxes star he had received and placed in storage. My uncle was given the key. He once told me that he lost it. No one speaks of him now. There has been no mention of him at any family affairs. His name does not get added to the birth- day cards my grandmother sends. He was not one of us. He was the enemy. I try not to think of him. But he haunts me whenever my eyes shut. I see no darkness, instead his face appears, wearing a wicked smile I had never seen. I knew my wife almost seven years before I found the guts to propose to her. I was terrified of waking up one morning and finding a stranger lying next to me. My mother hired a detective to investigate my father, just to make sure everything checked out. Grandma Anne moved in with my parents, unable to deal with what her friends would say about her. She redecorated my old room; its filled with mothballs, pantyhose, and social security checks. Now when I come home, I sleep on the pull-out couch in the den. RA r. w