âHow did I survive those times?', he muses. âI was sharp. I knew where to be and where not to be. I sidestepped, stayed alert, made myself useful, and remained silent:
I dreamt of you, my dear one,
I dreamt of you day and night.
I dreamt of your dark black eyes,
And awoke in sickness and fright.
Oh little bird, my dear heart,
Please be for a moment still.
Tend to the fire in my heart,
And do with me what you will.
October 1944. The twisted dome of the Great Synagogue lies charred in a field of rubble. Bialystok is a liberated zone behind the Soviet front. To the west the dying embers of a protracted war continue to flicker as the Allied armies close in on a crumbling Third Reich. Srolke Kott and his companions spend their nights in an abandoned building, Kupietzka 29, huddled against the elements. Cold winds find easy access through broken windows. A wick stuffed into a bottle of oil glows within a dim light. For hours on end they reminisce: fellow survivors keeping each other warm with endless tales of the other life they had known.
On Yom Kippur eve, one of them suggests they attend a Kol Nidre service he has heard is being held in a house on Ulitza Mlynowa. After all there is nothing else to do, nowhere else to go; and the way is easy, direct. Instead of the maze of alleys around which they would have had to wind in former times, there are empty spaces and vacant lots between the houses still standing.
Mlynowa 157. A small room. By the eastern wall stands a table laden with blazing candles. The room is packed with up to forty people, of whom only half a dozen or so are women. There are no children or elderly men. No one is wearing prayer shawls or white kitlech as basic ritual requires. Many are dressed in worn and weathered clothes. The men are unshaven, dishevelled. Among those present are Red Army officers, soldiers of the New Polish Army, and some who have travelled to the service from outlying villages.
A cantor conducts the prayers, but very few appear to be listening. Most seem locked in their private grief. A senior Red Army officer stands sobbing, a prayer-book clutched to a chest lined with medals. Srolke observes a man with a large moustache, leaning on a cane, a crucifix dangling around his neck â in appearance a Pole. He joins the rest of the makeshift congregation in their occasional cries of amen.
The room is swaying in a dream, a mirage in which reason has been turned on its head. Those present are not here to pray for forgiveness, as is the custom, but to conduct intimate conversations with themselves and a God that many had come to believe had abandoned them. One question haunts them all: can the Almighty explain? How was it possible?
Kol Nidre, Bialystok, autumn 1944. The bare remnants of a community grieve together; and in each other's presence they find, perhaps, a moment of solace.
Everyone is talking of Bialystok: Bunim, Buklinski, Yankel, inundating me with anecdotes, so that at journey's end the writer will record them, tales of the city I am on the eve of leaving, the Bialystok I had dreamed of for so many years; the city my parents had never ceased dreaming of, even as they had wanted to forget.
I have now more than an inkling of what they felt on the eve of their departures, and why it was so hard for them to wrench themselves free, despite the constant threat and undertow of menace. Bialystok was their siren's song, a spell that had bewitched generation after generation, an enticing melody which forever hinted at deliverance; and even when all that remained was a wasteland of rubble, survivors had still returned with the faint hope that they would rediscover their ancient vision, their lost dream.
And to this day the very last heirs cling to their dream, served by loyal Polish wives and mistresses, at a Sabbath table laden with vodka and chicken, entranced, despite all, by Bialystok's lingering presence, the remembrance of their youth, the protective blanket of their dwindling community, the last trace of a mother's embrace. They lament as they celebrate a receding past that has swept by them with the force of a hurricane, leaving in its wake merely a song of longing which they sing repeatedly, obsessively; until, one by one, the Sabbath meal at an end, they depart into the cool autumn air, the last Jews of Bialystok.
IN CURTAIN SQUARE, the neighbourhood park, stand two rows of Moreton Bay figs, six sentinels on either side of a path. âThey are grand old beauties', father tells me. He taps them with his fists. âRock hard', he pronounces. âEach one is a sculpture, a unique individual. Each one bears its own character, its own being', he enthuses. âThey cling to the earth with their many roots exposed, like snakes slithering into burrows.'
Father asks me to count the roots extending from the largest tree. There are over twenty. âSee how they unite into a thick trunk which gives way to a spacious dome', he points out. âObserve how the branches reach for the horizons. The smooth surfaces of their leaves mirror the sun and stay evergreen. They are as grand as the chestnut trees I knew in Bialystok.'
He has known these Moreton Bay figs for over forty years, though it is only recently that I have become aware of this âlove affair', as he calls it. During the earlier years, when the tension had been greatest, they had become his refuge, his private temples. He would come here at night and sit beneath them, as he had sat beneath the chestnut tree of Zwierziniec in the early years of this century. A man broken in spirit can pass by them and be comforted', father claims.
There is a certain position, by the kitchen table, from which a window high on the wall opposite the bathroom can be seen. Here mother often sits and gazes at the upper branches of a tree. Timber frames divide the window into twelve separate squares, so that the light streams in at many angles and degrees of intensity. Sometimes it is restrained, the branches barely visible. At other moments it blazes a luminous gold. In winter the branches are thin and bare, while in spring they erupt with leaves. In her ageing, mother's life has been reduced to a simple equation, a silence with infinite variations on tranquillity and light â concentrated, framed, contained, yet full of subtle movement and change.
The silence is rarely broken, except for a sudden gust of wind, the distant barking of a dog, the twittering of birds. âThey return every year', mother announces from one of her reveries. âBirds can speak', she adds. âThey have a language of their own. They probably talk about where they have been for the past year. They perch on that tree and chatter to each other. You can hear how pleased they are to be back.'
âThe whole of existence is contained in words', father claims. âWords are the source. They are more durable than the grass we are sitting on', he stresses, while poking his fingers at the ground. âThis grass must eventually fade, whereas words eternalise our experiences and express the sum total of what we have been in our lives. Words will never die, so long as there are human beings to receive them. All our knowledge and feelings can thereby be retrieved.'
Father is now fully in his element, spinning a long thread of thought to which he clings with tenacity so that it will not escape his grasp. âOf course there are words which bind us to prejudice and blind faith', he stresses. âSuch words must be stripped naked, so that we can find our way back to the pure meaning of things, to words which do not dictate our lives and condition our thoughts'
As father talks his whole being is in harness. âWords will always triumph', he asserts. âI am talking of words that express our innermost feelings. In words lie their potential to break out and be released.' As he makes this claim, father's voice falters and gives way to tears. But, as usual, he fights them off before they overwhelm him.
Yet
in that moment we had both glimpsed and felt that which cannot be captured in words.
But, of course, father tries. He tells me that in his tears he had sensed both his greatest happiness and regret. Happiness, because he had realised that, at last, he had been fully understood. His words had been received. Regret, because he knows that soon he must leave this world he has come to love so dearly. And, he concedes, there are moments which move beyond words. âPerhaps this is what can be called a zisser toit, a sweet death', he muses. âPerhaps this is what we are striving for after all â a silence, a zisser toit, beyond all memory and words.'
My earliest of memories: a rare gathering of relatives and Old World friends after a day of picnicking. I am feeling my way through a forest of legs. Smoke drifts down between the trees. As I crawl beside them, I come across a white object. I grasp it in my hands and weave my way through the forest until I find mother. She bends over, lifts me up, and carries me to the kitchen where she performs her feat of magic. She drops the dented ping-pong ball into a kettle of boiling water and, minutes later, it re-emerges, smooth, restored, fully rounded, a glowing white sphere.