Railways bring strangers

July 13, 2016 6 Comments

Today I am thinking of the courage of the Kashariyot, the young women serving the Jewish resistance as couriers. A first and important strategic step of the Nazis was to isolate the ghettos after the occupation of Poland. Couriers were needed for communication among the resistance and it turned out that young women had a much better chance of going undetected. Not only did they not cause attention when wandering the streets or traveling in broad daylight compared to men who were supposed to be at work, but they could not be identified by a check on circumcision. Most importantly, though, in contrast to the boys who had spent their time in religious schools, the girls spoke fluent Polish with undetectable accents, because they had been immersed in the culture and thus could pass. They did not only smuggle messages, in the end they even brought weapons and ammunition to the ghettos.

http://www.yadvashem.org/yv/en/education/newsletter/18/couriers.asp#!prettyPhoto

 

5 

Strangers

 

Railways bring strangers.

They disembark and look around:

they are helpless. Anxious fish

swim in their eyes.

They wear strange noses.

They have sad lips.

 

No one has come to fetch them.

They wait for the twilight

which makes no distinction between them

so they can call on their kindred

in the Milky Way,

in the lunar hollows.

 

One plays a harmonica –

off-kilter melodies.

Another musical scale

lives inside the instrument:

an inaudible sequencing

of isolations.

 

Rose Ausländer (translated by Eavan Boland)

friderikeheuer@gmail.com

6 Comments

  1. Reply

    Martha Ullman West

    July 13, 2016

    This is lovely, Friderike, text and image both. I had a friend years ago, a Dutch woman, who was such a courier in Holland under the German occupation. A salute to the brave young women!

    • Reply

      friderikeheuer@gmail.com

      July 13, 2016

      thank you!

  2. Reply

    Lee Musgrave

    July 13, 2016

    Wonderful montage… it’s strong beyond the text.

    • Reply

      friderikeheuer@gmail.com

      July 13, 2016

      The montage was from a portrait series – I do an annual calendar that alternates between portraits of some kind and landscapes of some kind. But the beams reminded me of the European train stations….

  3. Reply

    Carl Wolfsohn

    July 13, 2016

    Ripe for a movie.

    • Reply

      friderikeheuer@gmail.com

      July 13, 2016

      No, the movie should be of the story tomorrow – as it turns out it’s become an opera – but they left my part out….. stay tuned.

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