All Rivers Run to the Sea: Memoirs (69 page)

BOOK: All Rivers Run to the Sea: Memoirs
6.15Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

In the United States the Democratic Party fell victim to the student rioting. Hubert Humphrey lost the election, fulfilling Richard Nixon’s dream of living in the White House. A star appeared in the international political firmament: Henry Kissinger, a refugee from Germany and a respected political scientist from Harvard. I shall write more about this soon.

On April 2, 1969, in the Old City of Jerusalem, an ancient synagogue, the Ramban, that had been destroyed by Jordan in 1948, was opened for a wedding. Officiating was Saul Lieberman, who insisted that a local rabbi also be present. (After all, rabbis have to make a living too.) Time was of the essence, for it was the eve of Passover, and guests would have to hurry home to prepare for the holiday.

Bea and Hilda were there with their families. There were a few cousins, many friends. The groom’s mind wandered, seeking others who were absent. For this was a day he had in some ways dreaded, and now he feared being unable to contain his emotions. He should have been happy at the thought that his parents would have approved of his getting married. But he wasn’t happy.

As Lieberman recited the seven customary prayers blessing the couple, the groom, overwhelmed by sadness, saw neither his two older sisters, nor his nephews, nor his cousins, nor even his wife-to-be. He saw himself, as a child and then as an adolescent, at home, far away. He saw his father, his head slightly bent, and his mother, biting her lip. The night before, he thought that he must go and invite them to the wedding. Custom dictates that before his wedding an orphan go to meditate at the grave of his parents, respectfully requesting the honor of their presence. But this groom’s parents, like millions of others, had no grave of their own. All Creation was their cemetery.

The people shouted
mazel tov
, wishing the newlyweds joy, happiness, and peace, showering them with all the good wishes in the lexicon of the living. People shook hands and kissed. Cousin Eli Hollander wanted to sing a wedding song, but the groom dissuaded him. Jubilation might offend those who weren’t there.

Back in New York the Shabbat before—known as
Shabbat Hagadol
, or the Great Shabbat—an
aufruf
had been improvised in his honor at the small Hasidic
shtibel
he attended with his friend Heschel. In the congregation there were many survivors of the ghettos of Warsaw and Lodz, and of Treblinka.

Heschel had organized it all with Reb Leibel Cywiak. When the groom was called to the Torah to recite the appropriate blessings, almonds, raisins, and candy began raining down upon him.

After the service there was a Kiddush where wine, liqueurs, and cakes were served. Seated at the table, Reb Leibel and Heschel followed tradition by praising the groom. Joyous tunes were sung. There was dancing, frenetic Hasidic dancing of great fervor.

And the groom could no longer hold back his tears. He who since his liberation had always managed to control himself let go. The more his friends urged him to sing, to dance, the more he sobbed. The Hasidim pretended not to notice.

On the wedding day, in accordance with rabbinical law, two witnesses accompanied the newlyweds to the door of their room, on the
sixth floor of the King David Hotel. The window overlooking the Old City was open.

Of what does a man dream when he is forty years old and has made the decision, consecrated by the Law of Moses, to make a home with the woman he loves?

He sees himself as a child, clinging to his mother. She murmurs something. Was it something about the Messiah? He feels like telling her, “You died, and He didn’t come. And even if he does, it will be too late.” He walks with his father to Shabbat services, and suddenly finds himself in the ranks of a procession toward death. He wishes he could reassure his father, console him: “Don’t worry, your son will try to be a good Jew.” But he says nothing. He soundlessly calls to a gravely smiling, beautiful little girl and caresses her golden hair. His thoughts scale mountains and hurtle down steep pathways, wander through invisible cemeteries, both seeking and fleeing solitude and receiving stories already told and those he has yet to tell.

Glossary

Aggadah
    Traditional Jewish literature, especially commentaries, aphorisms, legends of the Talmud

ahavat Israel
    Love for, attachment to, the Jewish people

aliyah
    “Ascent” to Jerusalem; by extension, immigration of Jews to Israel

Amidah
    The major daily prayer

bar mitzvah
    The ceremony marking the assumption of adult religious responsibilities, at age thirteen

Beit Hamidrash (or Beit Midrash)
    A House of Study and Prayer

Betar
    An organization of Jewish Zionist youth

Bund
    The European Jewish socialist movement preaching development of Jewish communities in their countries of exile

Eretz Israel
    The land of Israel

Haganah
    A Jewish paramilitary self-defense organization in Palestine

Halachah
    The body of rabbinical Law

Hasid (pl.: Hasidim)
    Literally, “pious man.” A disciple of the movement founded by the Baal Shem Tov and influenced by the Kabala

havdalah
    The separation ceremony marking the end of Shabbat

heder
    A religious elementary school; Hebrew school

Irgun
    A Jewish nationalist organization fighting against the British occupation in Palestine

Kabala
    The study (or practice) of Jewish mystical sciences

Kaddish
    The prayer for the dead

kavanah
    Concentration of the mind on prayer or other religious acts

kiddush
    The evening prayer before meals on Shabbat or holidays

kipa
    The skullcap, or yarmulka, worn by Jewish males

kosher
    Ritually pure, in accordance with the dietary laws

Kol Nidre
    The prayer opening the Yom Kippur evening service

Lehi
    An underground Jewish organization opposed to the British presence in Palestine; also known as the Stern Gang

Maariv
    The evening service

maggid
    A preacher

Makhzor
    The prayer book for Jewish holidays

Mapai
    The Labor Party in Israel

melamed
    A teacher who gives elementary religious instruction

Midrash
    Commentary and exegesis on the Scriptures

Minha
    The afternoon service

minyan
    The quorum of ten men required for a communal religious service

Mishna
    The collection of rabbinical laws and decisions

mitzvah
    A divine commandment

Musaf
    The additional service following the main morning service on the Shabbat and holidays

Musar
    A movement founded in Lithuania to foster the teaching of traditional Jewish values and ethics

niggun
    A song or melody

Nyilas
    The Hungarian anti-Semitic, fascist party

Palmach
    The elite Haganah troops recruited from kibbutzim

Pesach
    Passover, the Jewish holiday celebrating the Exodus from Egypt

phylacteries
    See tefillin

Purim
    The holiday (marked by games, exchanges of gifts, and skits) commemorating the victory of Persian Jews over their enemy Haman

Reb
    A title of respect accorded any man versed in study

Rebbe
    The title accorded a Hasidic master

Rosh Hashana
    The Jewish New Year

rosh yeshiva
    The director of a rabbinical academy

Shavuot
    The holiday commemorating the revelation of the Law on Mount Sinai

Shekina
    The presence of God among His people

Shma
    The fundamental Jewish prayer, Shma Israel: Hear, O Israel, the Lord is our God, the Lord is One

shofar
    A trumpet made of a ram’s horn used on Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur

shtetl
    A Jewish village in Eastern Europe

shtibel
    A Hasidic place of prayer

shtreimel
    A wide-brimmed fur hat traditionally worn by Hasidim

sidra
    A passage of the Bible read at synagogue on Shabbat

siddur
    Prayer book

talit
    Ritual prayer shawl

Talmud
    The collection of rabbinical teachings and commentaries

tefillin
    Phylacteries—two small leather boxes containing four excerpts from the Bible, one strapped to the left forearm and one to the forehead during weekday morning prayers

Tetragrammaton
    The four-letter representation of the ineffable name of God

Tisha b’Av
    A day of fasting in memory of the destruction of the Temple

Torah
    The body of Mosaic Laws given in the Pentateuch and by extension in the whole Bible

Tsahal
    The Israeli army

tzaddik
    One of the Righteous, who seeks social, moral, and religious perfection

yeshiva
    A Talmudic school

Yishuv
    The Jewish community in Palestine before the establishment of the state of Israel

Yizkor
    The service in memory of the dead

zemirot
    The canticles sung during Shabbat meals

Zohar
    The Book of Splendor, which is the major work of the Kabala, esoteric commentary on the Pentateuch

A NOTE ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Elie Wiesel is the author of more than forty books, including his unforgettable international best-sellers
Night
and
A Beggar in Jerusalem,
winner of the Prix Médias. He has been awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the United States Congressional Gold Medal, and the French Legion of Honor with the rank of Grand Officer. In 1986, he received the Nobel Peace Prize. He is Andrew W. Mellon Professor in the Humanities and University Professor at Boston University
.

Books by
ELIE WIESEL

ALL RIVERS RUN TO THE SEA
This first volume of Wiesel’s memoirs recalls in intimate detail the experiences that shaped his life—from the small Carpathian village where he was born to the horrors of Auschwitz and Buchenwald to his discovery of his calling as a writer and “Messenger to Mankind.”
0-8052-1028-8 Schocken

AND THE SEA IS NEVER FULL
The concluding volume of Wiesel’s memoirs opens in 1969 as the author sets himself a challenge: “I will become militant. I will teach, share, bear witness. I will reveal and try to mitigate the victim’s solitude.” He makes words his weapons, and in these pages we watch as he meets with world leaders, returns to Auschwitz, and travels to regions ruled by war, dictatorship, and racism in order to engage the most pressing issues of our day.
0-679-43917-X Knopf

A BEGGAR IN JERUSALEM
In the days following the Six-Day War, a Holocaust survivor visits the reunited city of Jerusalem. At the Western Wall he encounters the beggars and madmen who congregate there every evening, and who force him to confront the ghosts of his past and his ties to the present.
0-8052-1052-0 Schocken

THE FIFTH SON
When the son of a Holocaust prisoner discovers his brooding father has been haunted by his role in a murder of a brutal S.S. officer just after the war, the son also discovers that the Nazi is still alive. What begins as a quest for his father’s love becomes a reenactment of the past, as the son sets out to complete his father’s act of revenge.
0-8052-1083-0 Schocken

THE FORGOTTEN
A distinguished psychotherapist and Holocaust survivor is losing his memory to an incurable disease. Never having spoken of the war years before, he resolves to tell his son about his past—the heroic parts as well as the parts that fill him with shame—before it is too late.
0-8052-1019-9 Schocken

FROM THE KINGDOM OF MEMORY
The essays and speeches collected here include reminiscences of Wiesel’s life before the Holocaust and his struggle to find meaning afterward, his impassioned testimony at the Klaus Barbie trial, his plea to President Reagan not to visit a German S.S. cemetery, and his speech in acceptance of the Nobel Peace Prize.
0-8052-1020-2 Schocken

THE GATES OF THE FOREST
A young Jew hiding from the Nazis in the forests and small towns of Eastern Europe allows another refugee to sacrifice himself in his stead. As he struggles with his guilt, one question recurs: How to live in a world that God has abandoned?
0-8052-1044-X Schocken

A JEW TODAY
In this powerful collection of essays, letters, and diary entries, Wiesel probes such central moral and political issues as Zionism and the Middle East conflict, anti-Semitism in the former U.S.S.R., the obligations of American Jews toward Israel, and the media’s treatment of the Holocaust.
0-394-74057-2 Vintage

THE TESTAMENT
On August 12, 1952, Russia’s greatest Jewish writers were secretly executed by Stalin. In this novel, poet Paltiel Kossover meets the same fate but, unlike his historical counterparts, he is permitted to leave behind a written testament. Two decades later, Paltiel’s son reads this precious record and finds that it illuminates the shadowed planes of his own life.
0-8052-1115-2 Schocken

THE TOWN BEYOND THE WALL
Based on Wiesel’s own life, this is the story of a young Holocaust survivor who returns to his hometown after the liberation, seeking to understand the mystery of what he calls “the face in the window”—the symbol of all those who just stood by and watched as innocent men, women, and children were led to the slaughter.
0-8052-1045-8 Schocken

THE TRIAL OF GOD
When three itinerant actors arrive in a small Eastern European village to perform a Purim play for the Jewish community, they are horrified to discover that all but two of the Jewish residents have been murdered in a recent pogrom. The actors decide to stage a mock trial of God, indicting Him for allowing such things to happen to His children.
0-8052-1053-9 Schocken

TWILIGHT
The story of a man whose search for a friend who saved him during the Holocaust leads him to question the very meaning of survival, this novel of memory, loss, and madness resonates with the dramatic upheavals of our century.
0-8052-1058-X Schocken

Other books

Gone to Ground by Taylor, Cheryl
Afterburners by William Robert Stanek
El jardín secreto by Frances Hodgson Burnett
Utopia Gone by Zachariah Wahrer
Siege of Stone by Williamson, Chet
I Kissed a Dog by Carol Van Atta
Different Gravities by Ryan M. Williams
Marked Man by William Lashner
Forever Amish by Kate Lloyd