Eva: A Novel of the Holocaust
By Meyer Levin
4.5/5
()
Survival
World War Ii
Friendship
Identity
Family
Power of Friendship
Secret Identity
Enemy Within
Horrors of War
Prisoner of War
Forbidden Love
Quest
Loyal Friend
Lost Lenore
Power of Hope
Resistance
War
Publishing
Escape
Fear
About this ebook
Meyer Levin
Meyer Levin (1905-1981) was called by the Los Angeles Times "the most significant American Jewish writer of his times." Norman Mailer referred to him as "one of the best American writers working in the realistic tradition." Throughout his 60 years of professional work, Levin was a constant innovator, reinventing himself and stretching his literary style with remarkable versatility. When he died, he left behind an extraordinary, diverse body of work that not only reflected the incredible life he led, but chronicled the development of Jewish history and culture in the 20th century.
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Reviews for Eva
9 ratings4 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Fascinating story inspired by a real woman. Worth the read.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5A very moving book, one you can't put down. At times sad and heart breaking. Thoroughly understandable characters, especially the internal life of the main character. Bravo for a really good book by a wonderful writer!
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Outstanding book! The courage and resilence of the survivors touched my heart. The author's words made me feel I was with Eva as she fought so long to stay alive and then thrive with her family.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This was very interesting, it was a very good book.
Book preview
Eva - Meyer Levin
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Publisher’s Note
Although in most cases we have retained the Author’s original spelling and grammar to authentically reproduce the work of the Author and the original intent of such material, some additional notes and clarifications have been added for the modern reader’s benefit.
We have also made every effort to include all maps and illustrations of the original edition the limitations of formatting do not allow of including larger maps, we will upload as many of these maps as possible.
Eva
A Novel of the Holocaust
MEYER LEVIN
Eva was originally published in 1959 by Simon and Schuster, New York.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
TABLE OF CONTENTS 4
About the Author 5
1 6
2 32
3 77
4 102
5 129
6 168
7 188
8 196
REQUEST FROM THE PUBLISHER 202
About the Author
MEYER LEVIN is perhaps most famous today for his novel Compulsion, based on the Leopold-Loeb case. Compulsion was published in 1956 and became one of the great critical and popular successes of the decade.
Of Mr. Levin’s earlier books, the best known are The Old Bunch, published in 1937, a book considered the classic story of American-Jewish life, and Citizens, which won wide critical acclaim in 1942.
In 1930, he wrote a novel of modern Jewish life in Palestine, Yehuda, and after the war he returned to that land to write My Father’s House, both as a novel and as a film. He has written for many magazines, including The Saturday Evening Post, Collier’s, The Reporter, Commentary and The New Yorker, was an associate editor of Esquire, and worked in Hollywood until the war, when he became a war correspondent. He has spent a number of years in Israel and Europe writing and filming the story of the Jewish survivors, and now lives in Israel with his wife (who writes under the name Tereska Torres) and their children.
[Ed. Note: Eva, although a novel, is based on the life of Holocaust survivor Ida Löw, who, following the war, eventually emigrated to Israel.]
* * *
To I., who lived this story.
1
PERHAPS you will be the one to live, my mother said.
Then, Eva, if you live, you must write it all down, how you lived, and what happened to all of us, so it will be known. You must write down everything exactly as it was."
It seems to me now that she is still saying those words to me, and I am still standing by the door, but I am already not myself. I am some strange, clumsy Ukrainian peasant girl named Katarina. Katarina can walk away from this house, but I, Eva, cannot leave. Katarina has the same bright cheeks that Eva always had, the firm bright-red cheeks bursting with life, the cheeks everyone had to stop and pinch—they just couldn’t help themselves, they said—when she was a little girl. Grown men would bend down to pinch them, and, of course, every mama in the town. Whether Eva was marching to school, or running errands, or bossing her band of playmates, nobody could resist stopping her. Even the town notary, Mr. Novick, who wore a prince-nez, would stoop down, exclaiming, Ah, Eva, what cheeks! What life! What health! Like a real Ukrainian peasant!
And he would give them a little pinch, and she could see his golden cuff links.
So on this day Eva, with the same red cheeks, and her black hair combed down around her face, peasant style, Eva in a broad peasant skirt, holding her handbag containing her false identity papers, Eva was now Katarina, and that was why she would be able in the next moment to turn her back and leave the house, to try to slip, alone, into the world where life was allowed.
I know that I must not feel guilt for it, that life demanded it, that my mother, who still at that moment had the strength and power of life in her, demanded it. I know that Mama sent me out. She sent me out to live. And yet that moment is frozen, as though I still might never take the decision to walk out and leave them to wait there for their fate.
And it is as though my family can be released from their eternal anxious waiting only after I have come home and told them what happened to me in that whole long adventure outside, just as on the nights when I first began going out with boys, and if I was out late, I knew that my mother and father were lying awake waiting, and only after they heard me come home would they put out their light and turn to sleep.
It is surely not there in our town of Hrebenko that they might be eternally waiting, and yet it is there that I see them in that house, as I am leaving. It is not our own house, with the candy store downstairs and the three fine flats with bathrooms upstairs, the house that Papa managed to put up right near the courthouse square, putting it up floor by floor as he paid off the debts on the first story so he could borrow money for the second. But then the Russians came, in the summer of 1939, and took over our side of Poland, and took over Papa’s store.
And two summers later, just after my high-school graduation, the Germans came and drove out the Russians, and then they took over Papa’s house, and drove us back to the old Jewish neighborhood behind St. Stephen’s church, where I had lived as a little girl.
The Blumenfelds took us in, giving us their living room. Their house had always been a second home to me, because Alla Blumenfeld was my twin, born on the same day—on New Year’s Day! And her older sister Freda was the same age as my sister Tauba. The four of us had started to school together on the same day, because we younger ones wouldn’t let the two older ones go without us. We had stayed together right through, always in the same class.
So the Blumenfelds took us in. They had a piano and works of art in their living room, where we put our bedding; Mr. Blumenfeld was an advanced
person; he had been the first to install a telephone, to own a radio. His daughters were the first two girls in town to own a bicycle, and Tauba and I were the next.
It was from the Blumenfeld’s house that Tauba was taken. She was taken in the third aktione, the third raid on the Jews of Hrebenko, when she ran out into the street to try to help four little girls get home. She was scooped up with the four little girls.
That was when the decision was made that I must leave. For some days we were stunned, and then Mother’s resoluteness returned. We cannot all sit here and wait to die,
she said. Eva, you must go out.
The way had already been whispered about. To try to go as a Christian, as a voluntary worker, through the Arbeitsamt into Germany itself. The older people could not hope to do it. But a young girl might succeed.
At first I refused. Now, more than ever, I could not leave them. But Mother would not listen to me. Eva, I tell you, you must go.
Then I said I would try to go if I could take along my little brother Yaacov. It would only mean the death of both of you,
said my mother. She was calm and practical. A girl might deceive them. But a boy—at the first doubt, they would see he was a Jew. No, I had to go without him.
But alone? Alone into that dark enemy land? I spoke of the plan to Alla, to Freda. They were even more frightened than I. We would be caught before we got out of Hrebenko. No, no, if it was to die, then it was better to remain with the family, to die together.
My mother kept after me. Eva, you must be the first. If you succeed, other girls will follow, and they will be saved, too.
She knew my vanity, my pride at being the first, the leader. Eva the Cossack!
everyone had called me as a little girl. And so finally I said I would go.
Once agreed, we worked with frantic haste. First we had to decide who and what I would be. A Polish girl? Their faces were rather longer than mine, and paler. With my round face and bright-red cheeks I might pass for Ukrainian. Yes, yes, Ukrainian, Mother said. For there was an advantage in this. To the Germans, the Poles were conquered enemies, still unruly. But in our region most of the villagers were Ukrainians who had hated being governed by the Poles. They had never really given up their fight for Ukrainian independence. And the Germans saw them as allies and treated them with favor.
Settled, then. Ukrainian.
I had to have papers, a birth certificate, an identity. It was my schoolmate, Rachel Schwartz, who helped me. We had always thought of Rachel as a girl with a pretty face but not much sense. While the Russians ruled over us, Rachel had worked in one of their offices. Now it turned out that she had saved some blank identity forms, and even a rubber stamp.
From the public register, we picked the name of a dead Ukrainian girl, Katarina Leszczyszyn, of the near-by village of Werchrata. She had been four years older than I, but I was well developed and could pass for twenty-two. And so we made up a Russian identity paper for her, with the names of her parents, their dates of birth—everything. Besides this, I managed to get a blank German work card, which we filled out in her name.
And what would be my story? It had to be a common story, plausible. I thought of another of my classmates, Rita Mayer. Before the Russians came, Rita had lived with her family in a small resort town, and she had gone to boarding school in Lwów. During the Russian occupation, the NKVD had arrested her parents, who were leading Zionists, and shipped them off to Siberia. Then Rita had come to live with her grandmother, near us in Hrebenko.
There were many such stories of young people left alone when their parents were suddenly taken off by the Russians. Such a story, the Germans would be ready to believe. And so I would be the daughter of well-to-do peasants, kulaks, who had been deported while I was away at school. And now, alone, I found life difficult. There were no decent jobs to be had in Hrebenko. I would rather go to work in the Reich.
Now I had to transform myself into Katarina. The Ukrainian girls had their own way of dress. A wide, colorful skirt, but not a real peasant skirt because Katarina was already a girl of some education. The blouse, too, had to be in between.
Katarina would nevertheless wear a kerchief, and comb her hair down around her face. And of course she would wear a cross.
Mama hurried to some Polish friends for a cross and a prayer book. I began to change myself, as an identity picture had to be made for my papers. I told myself that this had to be a real transformation, and not a disguise. For if I went out thinking of myself as Eva, only pretending to be Katarina, I would surely, somewhere, give myself away.
Mama returned, inspected me. And she too insisted, You must cease to be Eva altogether. You must not think of us. Who knows when the war will end and what the world will be like?
For in the fall of 1941 the German victories were uninterrupted; it seemed certain that they would rule all of Europe, perhaps the world.
Mama hung the cross on my throat. It was a good-sized cross, yellow, and it felt solid. I had never been particularly religious. On Sabbath, Papa would put on his long black coat and his fur-rimmed hat, and go off to the synagogue, but I always had felt this was mostly habit, and he had never required any observance of us. Mama kept a kosher house, also, I thought, out of habit, and on the great holidays—Passover and Rosh Hashana—we had feasts like all the other Jewish families. In school during the Russian occupation we had been taught, of course, that all religion is superstition. Still, this moment gave me a strange feeling. Their cross. Their Christ. It was as though, from when I was a little girl, some fear and awe of their magic talisman remained with me. It was as though some additional dreadful thing could happen to me if I were caught, even wearing their cross. But, after all, hadn’t Jesus been a Jew, too?
There was a knock. It was the photographer, and at the first instant he didn’t recognize me. We laughed. A good beginning. He took the picture, hurried home, and was back with it in an hour. Then Rachel and I pasted it on my Russian identity paper and stamped it, half across.
I would take with me a small wooden satchel, like the peasants used. Mama packed it. I saw her putting in one of my good dresses. Mama! No!
You were at school in Lwów,
she said, reminding me of Katarina’s story. So you could have a few city things. Eva, take a pair of high-heeled shoes, too. You must live openly and be like any lively young girl.
I ran out on a last errand. That evening, my closest friends were coming to say goodbye, and I hoped to find something to offer them, perhaps some fruit. And then, as I was hurrying along toward the square, I encountered a close friend of my sister’s, Esther Warshawsky. In the last months of the Russian rule, Esther and Tauba had been sent to the normal school in Lwów. We talked a bit, carefully, so as not to touch on Tauba. It came out that I was thinking of going away.
Suddenly Esther said, I too have thought of going. But, by myself, I’m afraid to try it. And my parents would never let me.
Esther! Come with me!
It was as though half my terror were taken from me. Not to be alone! We went directly to her house. As we walked together I kept looking at Esther, trying to see her as if I didn’t know her. She was quite small, thin, and pretty, with two long braids down to her waist. If the braids were wound in a circle around her head, she would appear completely Ukrainian. But in that moment she turned to me with a question, looking right at me. With her Jewish eyes. How could anyone ever mistake her eyes? Warm and dark, with their slightly melancholy look? And the way she had of twisting her head when she asked a question.
I knew where she had got that little mannerism with her head. It was her father’s way. Esther’s family was deeply orthodox. Reb Warshawsky was filled with sayings from the Talmud; only his sayings were usually questions. When the victim was stumped, Reb Warshawsky, his head cocked in just that way, would himself come out with the answer.
And now the same thing happened with Esther, except that her question was not from the Talmud. How do you plan to get out of Hrebenko?
she asked. You can’t just go to the station and get on a train. Everybody knows you.
I’ll get on the train at Huta Zielona,
I said. That was a stop about six miles away. I’ll slip out from the edge of town, take off my armband, and walk to Huta Zielona.
It was possible. At that time, the Jewish area was not yet closed in with barbed wire. You’ll go through town carrying a suitcase?
I hadn’t thought of that.
So now she cocked her head and recited in singsong, exactly like her father quoting the Talmud, First, we have to find a Pole to carry our bags to Huta Zielona—
Esther,
I said, "if we are going together, you’ll have to be careful not to talk like that, in singsong, like a rebetsen."
She understood at once, without taking the slightest offense. You too, Eva. You know, you talk with your hands.
I know. You’ll have to watch me, and I’ll watch you.
Oh, how much safer, to be going together.
To carry our suitcases,
Esther resumed, I’ll get Antek.
Antek, the father of a dozen children, was the porter at the post office where Esther had worked, after school, under the Russians. He would do anything for her.
We came to Esther’s house. She had two small sisters and an older brother. The whole family sat around the table as we discussed our plan. It was agreed that we should go. Only, couldn’t I wait a few days?
I was afraid that a change would prove unlucky. In one day, anything could happen.
But there was so much for her to do. She would have to get false papers. It will be done,
her brother said.
When my girlhood friends gathered around me that evening, it seemed that my entire life had come together there, in the Blumenfeld’s living room. There was Milla Stein, with her full, womanly figure, the first of us to have worn a brassiere. How envious we had all been. When there was a dance, and you danced near her, you could feel the boy who was your own partner being magnetized toward Milla. And when the flock of us, a cluster of girls, walked in the street, in the old days before the Germans came, and the boys circled around us and teased, and brushed against us and touched, Milla, instead of shrieking and slapping at them as the rest of us did, would merely say, Boys, leave me in peace.
And she would sway a little as if to shake off their touch. She was pleasant, Milla, and all of our mothers agreed that she was really a nice girl, and they never told us not to go with her, as they did with some others. And this was a triumph for Milla’s mother, because Milla’s father was only a barber and he never worked but lay around the house while her mother went out as a midwife. But poor Mrs. Stein somehow managed to pay for piano lessons for Milla, and tried to dress her well, and so we always invited Milla.
With her came Rachel Schwartz, who had always seemed so colorless, even though she had the most perfect features, the most beautiful face of us all. When we were just coming into girlhood, I had been so envious of Rachel, with her quiet ways and her beauty. For myself, everything I did was wrong, everything I did was talked about, I was a hooligan, a bandit, a Cossack, I would become the town scandal.
Suddenly as I greeted Rachel I recalled a time when I was twelve, and walked out with Munya Frankel, the shining light of my Hebrew class. Munya, who had been taken in the same raid as Tauba. He had played the mandolin so beautifully! And that evening long ago, when we were children, scarcely adolescents, Munya and I had come home late—after ten. It had been a soft, warm evening, and the boy had wanted to linger in front of our house. So I had asked Papa if we could stay out yet for a while. And there, in front of the boy, he had slapped my face! You get talked about enough already!
Papa had shouted. I had rushed to my room and beat the pillows in a choked hysteria, and Mother had come up, and I had cried out, Why? Why? I don’t do any more than the other girls, and I’m not even pretty like Rachel Why must everything I do be talked about?
Mother had soothed me and said, Eva, be glad for it. You have life. People will always be interested in what you do. A girl can be pretty, like Rachel Schwartz, but about Rachel people will never talk.
They would talk about me now. Though Rachel had helped me with my false papers, though they all said how brave I was, they would talk about Eva, the cruel one, leaving. Rita Mayer, whose parents were already gone, in Siberia, kept saying, I’m the one that ought to go.
But she wouldn’t leave her grandmother. Already, Rita had almost gone to her death with Grandma Mayer. In the second aktione, a month before, they had been caught, for there had been a baby crying in their hiding place, in the roof space of their house, and Grandma Mayer had taken the baby out, so the others wouldn’t be endangered by the cries. Just then the SS had come into the house and caught her, and Rita, hearing the commotion, had rushed out to her grandmother and been taken, too.
I had seen Rita and her grandmother rounded up with the others in the public square, waiting to be marched to the train. It happened that I could go about the streets fairly safely, for I had been put to work in the police headquarters itself, scrubbing, shining boots, running errands for the Germans, and the police all knew me.
When I saw Rita’s red head among the doomed, something came over me—an absolute recklessness. I caught her eye, signaled to her to work her way to the edge of the crowd, and then I distracted the nearest guard, asking him some excited, nonsensical questions. While he had his head turned, Rita and her grandmother escaped into an alley.
Rita kept talking about how I had saved her, and how, with my nerve, I would be sure to succeed. But why hadn’t I been able to save my own sister, why hadn’t I been able to think of something, do something when Tauba was seized?
Whenever this thought came over me I felt as though I wanted to burrow in among my friends, to remain here with all my friends close, close around me, with Alla, and Freda, together as from our earliest childhood, with Rosa Gelb, who always made up such romantic stories, with Lucia, the dentist’s daughter. I wanted to hold close, with them all around me, even to the moment when death came for us, and even into the moment of death. Then how could I go out by myself and be away from them?
The girls begged me to show them how I would look, so I changed my hair-do and put on the kerchief, and then hung the cross around my neck. It brought a little gasp from them; how often as children had we peeked into their
church, or watched our shikseh maids at their prayers, or in moments of closeness with the shiksehs asked them to let us touch their things, and so fingered their crosses and their talismans.
How does it feel?
each girl asked me. And Rosa cried, Oh, I was just going to say something, Eva, and I didn’t recognize you! Oh, you’ll succeed!
And Rita had to try on the cross. Does it make you feel any different? It must feel strange.
Each tried it, in turn, and then gave it back to me.
Mother had made tea, and she had even managed to get a bit of flour and bake some cookies. But it seemed to me, all at once, that I was out of place; I was the only one dressed up,
the way we would dress up for a Purim masquerade. I went quickly and took off the kerchief and combed back my hair, away from my forehead. Then I changed back to my own skirt and shoes. And so I would say farewell to them as myself, as Eva. It was our last time together, and which of us would live?
We always chattered in Polish, but certain Jewish words remained in our Polish, so now it was "Mazal tov, Eva." Each spoke the words solemnly, and the thought passed through my mind that the good-luck blessing would have been uttered with such solemnity only before my wedding. Like any group of girls, we had always wondered which of us would be the first to make that mysterious step, and now, in a strange way, with the same mazal tov, I was going off almost as though to my wedding, my wedding with my unknown destiny, and I would be the first among them to take this step, and I would be able to tell the secret of what it was really like, so that others could quickly follow.
Out of all my friends who came to say farewell to me and to wish me good luck that night, only three were to remain alive.
Then, the next afternoon, came the parting from my family. There I stood in my guise as Katarina. In the whole two weeks since Tauba had been taken, Father had hardly stirred. He had not gone out to each morning’s labor call in the town square. Let them take him; he no longer cared. He lay on the sofa, apathetic. He would hardly eat. How he had changed from the tall, quick man, the man who loved to strike a bargain, our papa who could always find a way out of every difficulty. When the Russians had taken away his store and made him a night watchman, he had begun to shrink, to bend. And now the Germans had taken the remainder of life out of him.
But when it was time for me to go, Papa seemed for a moment restored to his old self. He arose and got the metal box in which he had kept his cash, in the old days in the store. Now he placed inside it the deed to our house, and the few valuables that remained to us—his gold watch, and two small diamond earrings of Mother’s, and a few American dollars that he had hoarded—and some family papers. Then we sealed it all around with wax. We wrapped the box in cloth. Then we went down to the Blumenfelds’ cellar. Papa dug a hole and placed the box there, and Yaacov covered it up, and an old wine barrel was pushed over the spot.
Perhaps you will come back,
my father said. Then you’ll know where it is.
We returned upstairs.
Then I talked with Mother until it was time for me to go. She talked of the change in my plans now that another girl was going with me. It will perhaps be easier for you to get through together. But once you are there you must separate and not see much of each other. You will be tempted; you will be lonesome for someone who knows you, Eva, for one of your own people. But it will be dangerous for you to meet. Keep in touch with each other only occasionally, and from a distance.
How did she know, to advise me of this? She had never herself done such a thing as I was going to do, and yet it was as though she had already gone ahead of me to seek out every danger that her daughter might face. If I had been able to follow her advice much grief would have been spared me. And I knew the wisdom of it; I agreed as she spoke. How hard it would be for me to follow her words I did not know, for I had never been really alone.
And so it was four o’clock. I was dressed as Katarina. I had measured the time so as to reach Huta Zielona without having to wait too long for the train.
Antek was at the back door with his bicycle. Yaacov ran out and gave him the satchel, and Antek rode off.
Father put his hand on my head. I kissed him. A sound came from him. Yaacov was back already; I hugged him. A good journey, Eva,
he said manfully. He kissed me on the cheek, and I kept my lips for a long moment on his forehead; since his childhood I had hardly ever kissed my little brother. We had always fought. Yaacov was a wild one, wilder than I. How many times had I chased him around the kitchen, to catch him, to make him obey! And afterward, how I was to long to feel his twisting, angry muscles as he wrestled with me, even to feel the hurt of his shoe kicking against my leg as he wrenched himself free. To know he was there. A good journey,
he said.
And then Mother. It was as two women that we parted. Go and live,
she said. Eva, we cannot know what will be. If one day the war comes to an end, and there are none of us, even none of our people, and you cannot again be a Jewish daughter, then still, do as nature asks, and if the time comes, marry, and have children, and do not regret. You have been a good daughter, even if you were such a wild one.
She wiped a tear and repeated, sniffing, her habitual, joking curse,
the curse
she bestowed on me whenever I was at my worst. May your own children be as wild as you are, and pay you back!
And then she whispered, Live, my daughter. Live.
I stepped out the back door, resolved not to turn around.
I walked with my head down and yet I knew each house, each stone, that I passed. Here in these streets I had spent my childhood, here we had lived before Papa built the house near the town square. Yesterday, I couldn’t walk through these streets without everyone’s calling to me, stopping me, asking for news, because, working in the police station, I heard things. Eva, are they preparing another aktione? Eva, is it true that seven thousand Jews have been taken to the sports stadium in Lwów and shot down? Eva, is it true that the train that goes to Belzec—when it gets there...
But even in the police headquarters no one had ever spoken about what happened when the train, filled with Jews picked up in the sudden raids, arrived in Belzec. Belzec was a town several hours distant, and it had an ancient jail. Surely the jail could not possibly hold