What Time and Sadness Spared: Mother and Son Confront
the Holocaust
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| Roma Nutkiewicz Ben-Atar with Doron Ben-Atar |
| 224 pages, 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 |
| 12 b&w illustrations |
| Cloth 0-8139-2513-4 $27.95 |
| March 2006 |
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Roma Ben-Atar resisted until late in life the urging of her family
to share the memories of her Nazi-era experiences. The Holocaust
exerted a dark pressure on all of their lives but was never openly
discussed. It was only when her granddaughter insisted on hearing
the whole truth, with a directness partly generational, that Mrs.
Ben-Atar agreed to tell her story.
What Time and Sadness Spared is a journey of both loss
and endurance, moving with shocking speed from a carefree adolescence
in upper-middle-class Warsaw to the horrors of the Final Solution.
The young girl sees her neighborhood transformed into a ghetto
populated by skeletal figures both alive and dead. Unbelievably,
things only grow worse as this ruin gives way to the death factories
of Majdanek and Auschwitz and the death marches of 1945. Life
in the camps changes her in less than a day, as if "the person
in my body was a stranger I had never met." Her only consolation
is to lie on her wooden bunk, no mattress, and speak to the soul
of her mother, who, like virtually her entire family, had already
been swept away. Roma must summon astonishing powers of adaptation
simply to survive, bringing her finally through the wreckage of
postwar Europe and to an entirely new life in Israel.
In this unique family collaboration Roma Ben-Atar's son Doron,
a historian who brings with him fluency in psychoanalysis, contributes
through his commentary an awareness of the difficulties presented
by historical narrative and memory. A visitor to the much-changed
sites in which his mother grew up and was interned by the Nazis,
he also voices the perspective of the survivors' children and
their ambivalence over being "protected" from this past.
As the generation that endured the camps passes from this world,
What Time and Sadness Spared illustrates with particular
urgency the historical responsibilities of the survivors' descendants,
who must become the new vessels for a story that will not remain
alive on its own but demands our courage and curiosity.
Roma Nutkiewicz Ben-Atar is retired and
living in Israel. Doron Ben-Atar is Professor of
History at Fordham University. His most recent book is Trade Secrets:
Intellectual Piracy and the Origins of American Industrial Power.