by Andrea Dworkin
First published in Ms. magazine, Volume V, Number 3,
November/December 1994.
In early September 1993 I went to the United States
Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C., to do research for a book
on scapegoating, especially of Jews and women in anti-Semitism and woman
hating. In November I went back to the museum because Ms. asked me to write
about it. I consider myself not-a-civilian in the world of Holocaust memory,
no stranger. A survivor's knowledge of the women's camp and killing center
at Auschwitz-Birkenau was passed on to me by an aunt having flashbacks--
graphic, detailed. of rapes, murders, tortures--when I was ten, a child without
intellectual defenses. In a tiny room in Camden, New Jersey, I saw what she
said was happening--what she was seeing--as she reexperienced her captivity.
I still see it. Many of my teachers in Hebrew school were survivors, and
they were different from everyone else. In the 1950s, closer to the real
events, they lived more there than here: they shook, they cowered, they
suffered--beyond understanding, in silence, without explanation. They lived
in terror.
For me, the Shoah, the Hebrew word for "annihilation,"
is the root of my resistance to the sadism of rape, the dehumanization of
pornography. In my private heart, forever, rape began at Auschwitz; and a
species of pornography--sexualized anti-Semitic propaganda--was instrumental
in creating the hate. My adult heart knows that Julius Streicher, who joined
with Hitler in 1921, was executed at Nuremberg for his part in the genocide
of the Jews because he published the rabid, pornographic, Jew-hating tabloid
Der Sturmer, which was used by the Nazi party, then Hitler's regime, to fuel
aggression against the Jews. Streicher was convicted of committing a crime
against humanity.
* * *
Inside, the museum building is purposefully uncomfortable
to the eye, to consciousness. Prisonlike elements are part of the design:
cold, institutional brick walls made colder by exposed steel girders; windows
obscured by metal bars or grates or louvered slats. There is a visual eloquence
that does not let the mind drift, because the eye cannot find anywhere not
prison-inspired to land. The interior, developed by the architect to suggest
physical elements of Auschwitz, is ruthless: it demands alertness and suggests
both danger and oppression.
The permanent exhibition is on three floors of a five-story
building. One takes an elevator to the fourth floor: Nazi Assault 1933-1939
(Hitler's ascendance and the German conquest of Europe). The third floor
is dedicated to illustrating and explicating the facts of the Final Solution
1940-1944; and the second floor is the Aftermath, 1945 to the present.
Standing in line for an elevator, I am encouraged to
take a card on which is a photograph of a Holocaust victim, his name, his
biography. Other women fingering through the cards ask each other, where
are the women? Why aren't there biographies of women? They express a muted
outrage--not wanting to call attention to themselves yet unable to accept
that among the hundreds of cards there are no women. A museum employee (a
woman) explains that the cards of women have all been used. We are supposed
to be able to pick a biography of someone like ourselves and, with interactive
computer technology, find out what happened to our person at various stages
of the exhibit. The card machines were not in use (and have since been
discontinued); but the absence of women's lives from the biographies was
part of an old program, a familiar invisibility and absence, a simple
carelessness to get more cards printed or a more malignant indifference.
I went to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
with questions about women. Where, how, in what numbers, were women raped?
Where, how, in what numbers, were women prostituted--the brothels in forced
labor and concentration camps, where were they, who were the women, who used
them? Where, how, in what numbers, were women used in medical experiments,
and with what results? Who were the inmates in Ravensbruck, a camp for women
from many occupied countries but that earlier in Hitler's reign held German
political prisoners, prostitutes, and lesbians--how did they get there, what
happened to them? What exactly was done to Jewish women at Auschwitz-Birkenau
or to the Jewish women held at Bergen-Belsen in 1944? How did the hatred
of Jews and women intersect, not abstractly but on their bodies? How was
the sadism against Jewish women organized, expressed?
There were no answers to my questions in the permanent
exhibition's story of the rise of Hitler or the genocide of the Jews or the
mass murders of the Poles, Gypsies (Roma), and other stigmatized groups;
nor in the "aftermath," what happened in Europe when the Nazis were defeated.
Although there were films and photographs of women, often naked, terribly
brutalized, and there was first-person testimony by women survivors, there
was no explanation or narrative of their persecution as women; nor was there
any coherent information in the computers in the Wexner Learning Center,
intended to be an electronic encyclopedia of the Holocaust; nor in any side
exhibits. (One temporary exhibit, for children, is on the fate of a young
Jewish boy. Another documents the efforts of a brave male intellectual to
rescue mostly male intellectuals from Nazi-dominated France. In both, the
romance of male significance mobilizes feelings and attention.)
I was given research materials that demonstrated the
museum's commitment to documenting the egregious persecution of homosexuals;
included were biographies of eight gay men and one lesbian. The museum's
first conference--held in December 1993 on "The Known, the Unknown, the Disputed,
and the Reexamined"-- eliminated women altogether by disappearing the one
lesbian. There were talks at the conference on "Nazi Anti-Homosexual Policies
and Their Consequences for Homosexual Men" and "The Pink Triangle: Homosexuals
as 'Enemies of the State.'" There was scholarship on "The Black Experience
in the Holocaust Period"; but nothing on women--not on Jewish women or Gypsy
women or women political prisoners; not on female perpetrators, S.S. volunteers,
for instance, some of whom were convicted of war crimes; not on Hitler's
social policies on women's reproductive rights; not on the relentless early
suppression of the feminist movement in Germany. Women were apparently neither
known nor unknown, a common enough condition but no less heartbreaking for
that.
In the museum, the story of women is missing. Women
are conceptually invisible: in the design of the permanent exhibition, by
which I mean its purpose, its fundamental meaning; in its conception of the
Jewish people. Anti-Semites do not ignore the specific meaning or presence
of women, nor how to stigmatize or physically hurt women as such, nor do
those who commit genocide forget that to destroy a people, one must destroy
the women. So how can this museum, dedicated to memory, forget to say what
happened to Jewish women? If this genocide is unique, then what happened
to Jewish women was unique; attention must be paid. If not here, where?
Genocide is different from war. In a genocide, women
and children are primary targets, not accidental victims or occasional
combatants. This museum, governed in its narrative choices by a courteous,
inclusive politics of sensitivity to ethnic and political persecution, leaves
out the story of the Nazis' hatred of women. The role of misogyny in the
organized sadism of these men must be articulated: because women's lives
were destroyed by careful plan; and because that sadism continues to contaminate
and compromise what it means to be human. The Nazi invasion of the human
body--the literal and metaphoric castration of subjugated men, the specter
of the sexualized, tortured. emaciated "Jewess," mass plundered, mass
murdered--is still the touchstone for an apparently depoliticized social
sadism, a fetishized rapism that normalizes sexual humiliation and mass
dehumanization. Sex tourism is one contemporary example--Thai women and children
kept in brothels for the use of male consumers from developed countries.
This is what it means to pay attention to the sadism
of the Nazis in the context of the Holocaust museum. Germans with disabilities
were the first victims of secret, systematic murder--from October 1939 to
August 1941 at psychiatric clinics. Groups of 15 to 20 would be gassed in
carbon monoxide chambers. In the permanent exhibition, there is a photograph
of children being killed by lethal injection, their awful steel beds, the
restraints. Behind this photo is another--smoke comes out of the chimney
of Hartheim, a storybooklike castle near Linz, one of the clinics.
There is a photo of a naked girl, probably adolescent,
"mentally handicapped," taken before she was killed. She is standing up,
facing the camera, full-frontal, but she does not have the strength to stand
on her own--her rib cage is all bones--so a nurse in a conventional white
uniform holds her up by force; the pain on the girl's face is horrible. The
photograph itself is Nazi child pornography--no breasts, no hips, not enough
food for that, no paint or makeup, just a naked body and pure suffering;
child pornography for real sadists, those who do not want their victims to
smile. And there is a photo of an eight-year-old boy, also "mentally retarded,"
also naked, also full-frontal, this too child pornography Nazi-style, the
camera complicit in the torturer's pride, his monument to memory.
Concerning disability, so-called Aryans turned in their
own, not a dreaded racial "other." This was the first place where murder
could hide behind doctors who would legitimize it. I heard a woman say, "It
makes you wonder about Dr. Kevorkian." Yes, it does; and also about oneself--how
complicit am I in devaluing those with disabilities, how much fear and prejudice
are part of that complicity? I asked myself a lot of hard questions. I was
able to ask them because the museum told the story. Those who don't see that
pornography is, at its core, the appropriation of another person's body,
identity, life, might also begin to have questions.
The museum uses words, photographs, documents, films,
and artifacts to create a discourse vivid with detail. Archival film and
photographs from the period have been transferred to videotape for display.
Some exhibits feature photographs mounted on walls. There are more than ten
thousand artifacts, ranging from concentration camp uniforms to leaflets
confiscated by the Nazis to children's drawings and paintings made during
the years 1932-1944. The artifacts are startling, often beautiful. In telling
the story of how the Nazis persecuted and murdered the Gypsies, there is
a wagon, with a violin. "Yeah, this is the kind of wagon I saw going along
the Danube in 1935," said a man behind me. The violin belonged to Miodrag
Djordjevic-Tukalia, a Roma musician executed by the Germans in October 1941.
Each time a name is attached to an artifact, one is made to remember that
everything happened to someone. It is as hard to remember the individuality
of the victims as it is to take in the mass nature of the slaughter.
There are clothes and ornaments that belonged to Roma
women; photographs of Roma prisoners being deported to Poland; and a film
of Roma children used in so-called racial research. They are clothed and
still vibrant, many smiling. Almost all of the Gypsy children at Auschwitz
were killed.
Approaching the concentration-camp area, I stop thinking.
None of it is unfamiliar to me; but here is a real boxcar used to transport
Jews, a real barrack from Auschwitz-Birkenau. Film is not easier. There are
films of the mass killings by mobile killing squads: a line of naked women
standing in front of an already-dug mass grave, naked women shot, falling,
piled on top of each other, ravines filled with misshapen bodies. Months
later, this will be what I wish I had not seen.
Before one enters the boxcar, there are artifacts from
the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, Passover 1943: a 1929 Mauser rifle, fuses for
the two unused Molotov cocktails, two 75mm artillery shells, a pistol. Near
the boxcar, to its side, is a workbench that concealed a hiding place for
Polish Jews in the house of Stefan Petri near Warsaw; a handcart used to
transport heavy loads and dead bodies in the ghetto; a manhole cover, from
Warsaw, because Jews hid in the sewers.
There is a wall of photographs of Jews and Gypsies
being deported, from internment camps and ghettos to concentration camps
and killing centers; still photos of the trains that transported them, all
preface to the actual boxcar. Now one must choose to walk through it or around
it. The boxcar is set up this way so that Holocaust survivors do not have
to walk through it.
The freight car is clean now. I wonder if they had
to scrub it out. It is smaller than I could have imagined. It is dark inside.
There is nowhere to sit. Aunts and uncles and cousins of mine were here.
There is a wrought-iron gate to a camp, with its
wrought-iron arch, Arbeit Macht Frei ("Freedom Through Labor"). In front
of it are piles of things taken from the victims: scissors, can openers,
strainers, graters, mirrors, toothbrushes, razors, clothes, hangers, hairbrushes,
shoe brushes, knives, forks, spoons; and a photo of confiscated suitcases,
duffel bags, prayer shawls, canes, leg braces, and artificial limbs. One
walks under the arch--through the gate--to a real barrack from
Auschwitz-Birkenau, one of the more than 200. This barrack held Jews from
Theresienstadt Ghetto in Czechoslovakia.
There are benches to sit on, before going in. I sit.
The bench is peaceful, the floor a hard, smooth, shiny stone surface with
lovely pastels in it. Then I see the identification of the very floor under
my feet: "A path connecting Treblinka killing center with a nearby forced
labor camp was paved with the crushed remains of tombstones from Jewish
cemeteries. Below is a casting from a section of the path; Hebrew letters
are visible in several pieces." Behind me there is sound: a glass-enclosed
room, also with benches, with photos of the physical plant at Auschwitz-Birkenau,
and from speakers in the floor come the voices of survivors of Auschwitz
saying what happened to them there, the small details of degradation, narratives
of humiliation, torture, and overwhelming loss. I walk on the casting of
the crushed tombstones from Treblinka into the Auschwitz-Birkenau barrack
where, had I been born earlier, I might have been with the majority of my
family on both sides. The bunks are wood, almost slats--but then, they didn't
have to bear much weight, did they? I have seen photos with the inmates
stacked-in lying flat, but the eye plays a trick: one thinks the bunks must
have been bigger to hold so many. There is no smell. This too must have been
scrubbed down.
In the center of the barrack; are cement walls about
four feet high behind which are video displays of some of the medical
experiments: photos of dismembered bodies and of bodies and body parts preserved
in vats: films of skeletal boys used in medical experiments by Dr. Josef
Mengele, known in Auschwitz as "the Angel of Death"; photos of skeletal girls
with bruises and open sores all over them. There is a Ravensbruck woman;
a single man at Dachau being used for experiments at extremes of air pressure;
a Gypsy man being injected with seawater right into his heart; a Jewish dwarf
who was subsequently stabbed to death to study his bone structure; a Jewish
woman used in sterilization experiments. The low walls are supposed to conceal
these videos from children.
There are bowls the prisoners ate from; Zyklon B canisters
that were used in Auschwitz-Birkenau and Majdanek; a scale model of Crematorium
11 at Auschwitz-Birkenau that shows how vast it was, and also where the victims
undressed, were gassed, were cremated.
You pass an exhibit on why the U.S. War Department,
when bombing military targets only five miles away, refused to bomb the train
tracks to Auschwitz to stop delivery of Jews. Though Jewish groups in the
U.S. repeatedly begged for this bombing, Assistant Secretary of War John
J. McCloy said it "would be of such doubtful efficacy that it would not warrant
the use of our resources." You pass through a steel passageway with a glass
floor and the names of victims etched in glass panels on the walls. You move
into an area with brick walls and a steel floor. You round a corner and there
is a smell, strange and bad, thick and heavy, almost suffocating. But you
walk onward and then on each side of you there are shoes, thousands of shoes;
to your left and your right, the shoes of the dead brought from Auschwitz
to be on exhibit here. "We are the shoes, we are the last witnesses," says
a poem by Yiddish poet Moses Schulstein inscribed on a wall. It is almost
unbearable. Then there is a wall of photographs--just arms with tattooed
numbers. The arms face a wall with smaller photographs of emaciated
prisoners.
Covering another wall there is a huge color photograph
of the hair they cut off the women at Auschwitz, a mountain of human hair;
adjacent to it, a black and white photo of this hair as it was baled for
sale. Facing the mountain of hair are photographs of Hungarian Jewish women
with their heads shorn. There is a casting of a table on which gold fillings
were removed from corpses: castings of crematorium ovens from Mauthausen;
a stretcher used to move bodies, a crematorium poker.
When the war ended in 1945, two thirds of Europe's
Jews had been murdered. According to Deborah Dwork in Children with a Star,
"a mere 11 percent of European Jewish children alive in 1939 survived the
war; one and a half million were killed."
The museum honors the "Rescuers," those who tried to
save Jewish lives: a whole village, Le Chambon-sur-Lignon, in France, that
saved 5,000 refugees, including several thousand Jews (the Bible of its pastor,
Andre Trocme, is on display); Raoul Wallenberg, a Swedish diplomat who worked
relentlessly to rescue the Jews of Budapest; an underground Polish group
code-named Zegota that provided money, false identity papers, and hiding
places for 4,000 Jews; and the Danes, who refused en masse to collaborate
with the Nazis. On display is a boat used by the Danes to smuggle Jews to
safety in Sweden. According to the museum, "Among the Nazi-occupied countries,
only Denmark rescued its Jews." The Danes raised over $600,000 to help the
hunted escape; 7,220 Jews were saved; nearly 500 were deported to Theresienstadt
Ghetto--and all but 51 survived.
And there are sadder stories of resistance. In Lidice,
Czechoslovakia, on May 27, 1942, Reinhard Heydrich, former chief of Reich
security police, an architect of the genocide, was shot (he died later).
In retaliation, all the male villagers were murdered, the women sent to
concentration camps, the children jailed in Lodz Ghetto or, if blond enough,
put in German homes. The two Czech resistance fighters who killed Heydrich
committed suicide rather than surrender. The Nazis, never camera-shy,
photographed the executions of the villagers.
There were 32 parachutists trained by the British in
Palestine and sent to Hungary and the Balkans as saboteurs. These fighters
also wanted to rescue Jews under German occupation. None was more committed
to this cause than the poet Hannah Senesh, a Zionist who emigrated from Hungary
to Palestine as a teenager. Commissioned as an officer in the British Army,
she fought in Yugoslavia with the resistance. On crossing the border into
Hungary, Senesh was arrested by the Nazis as an enemy soldier and jailed
by the Gestapo in a military prison in Budapest. The Nazis also jailed her
mother, Catherine Senesh, who was still living in Hungary, in the same prison,
and threatened Hannah with the torture and killing of her mother. But it
was Hannah, who never broke, whom they tortured and, after five months, executed
on November 7, 1944. Her last poem read in part: "I could have been twenty-three
next July;/I gambled on what mattered most,/The dice were cast. I lost."
The museum displays her words but does not tell her story.
There was the White Rose, students identified by the
museum as the only German group to demonstrate and leaflet against the genocide
of the Jews. The leaders, Sophie and Hans Scholl, sister and brother, were
beheaded in 1943. (I keep a remembrance of them--an enamel white rose raised
on a background of black and gray beads--in front of the German editions
of my books.)
The permanent exhibition ends in an open amphitheater,
on the screen survivors, in good health, strong, fleshy, spirited, with stories
of agony and unexpected uplift. They speak with calm and authority, only
one with the constant nervous tremble I remember in survivors when I was
a child. This is a triumph: to have forged a way of telling. It is impossible
to overestimate how hard this must have been. The Nuremberg trials, the
historians, gave the survivors some ground on which to stand; but they had
to find both words and the will to speak. Many overcame their shame--the
internalized humiliation of anyone so debased, in captivity. But many have
not spoken, maybe because here too men have established the standard for
what can be said.
In the last two decades, feminists have learned how
to talk with raped, prostituted, and tortured women--what they need to be
able to speak, how to listen to them. This museum was in formation for the
second of those two decades, a ten-year period of research, investigation,
discovery--finding artifacts, deciding which to use and how, which stories
to tell and how. No use was made of feminist work on sexual abuse or bodily
invasion and violation--neither the substance of this knowledge nor the
strategies used to create the safety in which women can bear remembering.
I know Holocaust survivors who have not spoken out: women who were raped
or sexually hurt. This museum did not become a safe place for women's testimony
about the sadism of sexualized assault. One rationale for building it was
that soon the survivors would pass on, and the burden of memory would be
passed from them to all the rest of us. But because the museum did not pay
attention to women as a distinct constituency with distinct experience, what
women cannot bear to remember will die with them; what happened will die
with them. This is a tragedy for Jews and for women, with miserable consequences
for Jewish women. The conceptual invisibility of Jewish women is the kind
of erasure that is used--indefensibly, with a prejudiced illogic of its own--to
justify yet another generation of second-class status for women in Jewish
communities and in Israel. The torment of women in the Holocaust was not
second-class, and it cannot translate into second-class rights. Acknowledgment
and respect are necessary; the conceptually invisible have neither.
Perhaps the threat of seeking this knowledge is that
some of the sadism is familiar, even familial; not confined to camps or genocide.
Better to avoid any crime against women that men who are not Nazis still
commit. Or perhaps women are conceptually invisible because of the continuing
and belligerent sexism of the men w ho run Jewish institutions now--but the
blinding arrogance of sexism has no place in this museum. I want the suffering
and endurance of women--Jewish or not Jewish, in Auschwitz or Ravensbruck,
Bergen-Belsen or Dachau, Majdanek or Sobibor--reckoned with and honored:
remembered. I want the rapes documented, the brothels delineated, the summary
murders of pregnant women discussed. I want the medical experiments--excision
of genitals, injections into the uterus--explained, exposed. I want the
humiliation rituals--forced nakedness, cutting and shaving of hair, punishments
of hundreds or thousands of women standing naked in the cold for 12 hours
at a time--articulated. I want the beatings, the whippings, the forced hard
labor and slave labor, narrated. I need to know about those who resisted
and those who escaped; there were some. I need a heritage on the female side.
I want this museum changed so that remembrance is not male. I want to know
the story of women in the Holocaust.
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