What
sad humour, what lucid laughter, what a fine, acute critical sense, all enveloped in a
melancholy of misery, of terror …
9
Grandma has died. Ten hours after a heart
attack. Summoned by telegram, I arrived in time to hold her living hands in mine: those small,
thin, bony hands that haven’t rested in seventy years; even in sleep they signalled
restlessness.
She died slowly, fighting until the end,
suffering terribly and completely conscious until the final moment, her eyes open, searching.
The merciless lucidity of the dying! A slight glaze to the eyes, but aware in the final
struggle, not allowing a single gesture, sign or shadow to escape her attention.
Why such resistance? Death comes, let it come.
Receive it.
I would have wanted this old woman of ours to
understand the end with simplicity and to smile in friendship, with acceptance. I would have
wanted her to remember the Bible she read to me, the patriarch-friends, their harmonious wives,
I would have liked her to remember the candles lit on Friday night, the white headscarf she wore
when among the brass candlesticks, the bread she kneaded with her hands all her life, all these
simple things, all these gentle joys, and to pass away in their homely glow.
Why such resistance? Why so much questioning? She
seemed to cling to every minute, struggling with each one.
It reminded me of Grandfather’s agony,
which was even more terrible, as in addition to physical suffering it was a quarrel with God and
destiny, a final protest, a cry.
But she, Grandma, looking like a child disguised
as a grandmother, should have died differently, more calmly, more easily …
*
How badly we die! We haven’t even learned
to do that from the centuries of death we’ve passed through. We live badly, but we die
even more badly, in despair, struggling. We miss our last chance to make peace and be saved. The
sad Jewish death of people who, not living among the trees and the beasts, haven’t been
able to learn the beauty of indifference in death, its simple dignity. The greatest Jewish sin
– perhaps.
… And the terribleness of Jewish mourning.
The vigil from the night before the burial, the tired, unbelieving shaking of heads of the women
keeping vigil, the lament of the Kaddish.
A single beautiful thing: the white death shroud.
There could be something regal in this return to the earth, a good, generous solemn fact. But we
mutilate it with our despair, which is suffocating. We call ourselves sceptics, but we
don’t deserve such praise. I’ve seen how they cry at a Jewish funeral, and I know
nothing more unrestrained, more awful. To cling so stubbornly to this life, to renounce all else
so as not to give it up, to choke it with your desperate love, to believe yourself lost when you
have lost it – such a terrible inability to rise above it.
Whoever has ever leaned against a tree, who has
ever thought with melancholy of his loneliness, can’t fail to meet death without a feeling
of being a bit above it, and smiling at it nonchalantly and indulgently, with friendliness, with
gentle farewell, with a certain sensual thrill.
Our grieving is visceral, tyrannical,
uncomprehending. And, more seriously, it is lacking in love. Of the many trivial aspects of the
Jewish sensibility, this unrestrained mourning is the most unworthy. I think, however, that it
is something we have accustomed ourselves to do here, in the ghetto. Death in the Bible is a
glorious event.
Mama’s pain saddens me. It irritates me,
in fact, as I’d like her to be accepting rather than resigned. There were moments when we
almost quarrelled. ‘She was my mother and I want to mourn her,’ she snapped,
defending her right to grieve. (I sometimes have the mean impression that her mourning is a new
form of indulgence and that she deliberately seeks it.)
Of course, I’m unfair. I know how much love
wounds, without forgetting Grandma’s death. But that’s exactly what I don’t
want to forgive – this love which has greater rights than death. This love that struggles
to tie down and preserve a shade that has passed on. Such rights don’t and can’t
exist.
And there’s something else that disturbs
me. I feel that my personal freedom is affected. I can’t accept that someday, when my turn
to die comes around, I will leave in my wake such wild, desperate, pointless suffering. I
don’t want to be loved so unrestrainedly.
If I were asked one day to give up my life for
something – for a revolution, for love, for whatever nonsense – the idea that Mama
would suffer for me the way she’s suffering now horrifies me. Does she have any right to
suffer in this way? Doesn’t this trespass on matters which are mine to deal with?
Isn’t this an obstacle to me fulfilling my destiny? Isn’t it a terrible moral
pressure? She loves too unfairly, too oppressively, to the point at which it becomes suffocating
and undignified. There is too much devotion in the Jewish family, too many gushing emotions, too
many sacrifices made. Terrible advantage taken of good children and mothers prepared to
sacrifice themselves.
1 comment