go upward no matter what I do. I can work ten hours a day, I can be starved to death and watch people die, but I cannot smileit is impossible.
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The wood under our bare feet is hard and unforgiving. I complete a round-off. Applause. A girl does a split. Applause. The bottom of the pyramid lines up. The second level gets on top of their backs, then the third. I vault on top of all of them, praying they don't collapse beneath me from fatigue. Then I stand up, raising my hands over my head, opening my mouth slightly. It is not a happy face I wear, it is a questioning face, a mouth hanging like a question mark. Why am I doing this? Is it really worth a piece of bread?
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The applause is mediocre. I leap to the ground. We line up holding hands, bowing to our superiors, then turn around and march, chests out, chins up, back to our block.
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In the block elder's room we return the gym clothes and take our extra piece of bread, like dogs getting a bone. "Good work." She praises us. "Next time," she continues, ''I think we should try some more difficult flips." Eyes lowered, I scan the ground for some relief while splitting my portion of bread exactly in half to share with my sister.
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There is not going to be a next timecan't she see how sick and tired we are? Just these few days of practice have taken their toll on our bodies. I'm afraid I have lost more weight; I know some of the other girls have. All for a piece of bread. We should have an entire meal for the work we did. I never want to do anything like it ever again. Crawling into our space on the shelf, Danka whispers, "You were good, Rena." Her voice is so sweet, so loving. My head droops. My eyelids fall. I disappear.
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Somehow we figure out how many Sundays we have been in camp. This tells us it is Yom Kippur, and we fast from sundown to sundown. In my heart I pray: Oh, Lord, my Lord, please help my parents and protect them until we can return home. Tell them we
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