Amiram Hayardeny's My China Experience

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http://blogs.sun.com/ChinaExperience/date/20080526 Monday May 26, 2008

Tattoos, Babies, and the Israeli Flag

The picture below broke a personal record for me. The elapsed time between seeing this picture and the first tear could be measured in nanoseconds. But that was one record broken, there were a few more. The parade of feelings and memories. Personal, familial, tribal and global all came streaming. Faces of the living and the dead. Faces of old an young, of happy and sad. Of friends and foes.

As I'm writing these words, it occurs to me that explanation is necessary. The blue and white Israeli flag, the tattooed hand of an old lady, and the chubby little hand of a baby. Many are familiar with chubby little hands. Less may be familiar with the Israeli flag. Few are familiar with old ladies with tattooed numbers on their hands.

When I was young, Israel was full of those. They weren't so old back then, they had tattooed numbers on their hands, and it was said: those with the numbers on their hands. Having this number on the hand was the clearest, gruesome, chilling evidence that these people had something in common. They belonged to a certain club. Not the kind of club you might be thinking about. Not an upper class Golf club, not a Yacht club. Not even an exceptional fraternity or sorority, although one might claim that it was precisely that. These people spent time in the darkest places ever to have existed on this planet. And they lived to tell. They were the survivors of Hitler's death camps.

The German, in their incredible effectiveness and order, kept records of every single person they ever de-humanized, and ultimately killed. Every person who entered the gates of the death camps was branded. Like cattle. They were branded with a serial number. When their turn came to be eliminated, the records could have been set straight, that this once human, professional, family person, Jew - is no longer. Mission accomplished.

But some, against all odds, survived. They rose from the ashes, they picked whatever was left of their humanity, dignity, of their families, of their former lives and former identities, and went to Israel. There, slowly, carefully, with a lot of help, patience and love, some of them were able to rebuild. To put together families, businesses, and a country. Imagine that.

I don't have a clue who the people in the picture are.  But the old hand, with the tattoo is my grandmother's, and the chubby little hand is mine. The flag is my country's. It's irrelevant that my grandmother is no longer with us, and that I no longer am a baby. Both my grandmother and I have a strong connection to the land of Israel. The three elements in the picture are combined into one big evidence - we're here to stay.

* The picture was taken by Karen Gillerman-Harel.  The picture won the contest "Israel Sixtieth Birthday Flag".  All rights reserved to Karen Gillerman-Harel.

Comments:

Amiram, I was deeply moved by this.

Posted by qyjohn on May 27, 2008 at 10:18 AM CST #

[Trackback] Bookmarked your post over at Blog Bookmarker.com!

Posted by babies on May 27, 2008 at 04:58 PM CST #

I was also moved by this post.

To be clear, it was all prisoners of Auschwitz (except ethnic Germans and police prisoners) after 1941 who were tattooed... this treatment wasn't just reserved for Jews:

http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Holocaust/Tattoos.html
http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Holocaust/tattoos1.html

This also brings to mind "First they came..." by Pastor Martin Niemöller:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_they_came...

who himself was a survivor of both the Sachsenhausen and Dachau concentration camps.

Posted by Robs on May 27, 2008 at 07:47 PM CST #

Amiram,

while I am not Jewish (and will admit that I do not always see eye to eye with you on some aspects of Israeli politics) I am one of those that do not need any explanation for this picture. It could be my story, too, with somewhat different flag.

I owe my own existance to the fact that my grandfather was shipped to Germany as slave farm labourer during WWII. He survived, but the wife and children he left behind were killed by Nazi collaborators. I still ponder on the strength he needed to come back, start again, dare to have another family and live on.

In a way, I see you as my kin. Any differences between us are negligible compared to the fact that we share the legacy of survivors.

Posted by S. on May 30, 2008 at 02:39 AM CST #

Dear Amiram,

THIS IS MY STORY... TOO !
I was touched to read your blog refereing to the image of Hands & Flag which I took.
I am proud and happy to have this oppertunity to deliver the message of hope & optimism of our future via my photograph.
The old lady's hand is my best grandmother's childhood friend Yaeli. Dora Dreiblatt was born 1922 in Poland and is an Aushwitz Holocaust survivor. The baby's hand is her great grandaughter Daniella who is the 4th generation in their family. they are a very special and close family to me.

Posted by KAREN on June 05, 2008 at 04:08 AM CST #

this picture is worth a million words and even more tears, which I am at this moment wiping away. God bless!!

Posted by Christine on August 08, 2008 at 12:16 AM CST #

Seeking Karen Gillerman!!!!!!

Who else has received this beautiful picture?
This picture is a part of our event called
We love you Israel. Sept 21,2008
at the Ohio Statehouse.

Posted by Blossom Brackman on September 20, 2008 at 12:33 PM CST #

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