I was trembling, I collapsed on the ground and rolled in the mud. I wanted to die. “I want to die,” I howled as loud as I could.
Mohamed came over, put his arm around my shoulder and led me back to the village like you’d lead a blind man. He didn’t speak French, so he thought I had been lashing out at Allah. Over and over he said in a reproachful tone, “It is mektoub, Malek, it is fate, we must accept it.” At that moment I wanted to kill him too. I pushed him away and said, “Mektoub, mektoub. . So Allah made you this way, so spineless and weak that when people come to slit your throats like sheep you do nothing?” Even as I’d said it, I felt ashamed. That whole day in the airport, special agents had treated us like dogs, like camp prisoners, we’d been terrified, starving, numb with cold, soaked to the skin, they’d taken our suitcases, our papers, our identities, gassed us with exhaust fumes and left us in the dark, in the filthy hangar, without a word, without a look, and not one of us had done a thing, we hadn’t asked questions, hadn’t demanded that our rights be read to us before we let them take us away. We were all thinking, This is how things are, there’s nothing we can do. And we all watched, silent, relieved, when the others were loaded back onto the truck and driven off into the unknown. “It’s not mektoub, Mimed,” I said, gasping for breath. “It’s us, we’re the problem.”
I needed to be alone. Alone forever.
I went back to my parents’ house. My house now — I am the last of the Schillers. It smelled of mould and neglect. I aired the rooms and lit a fire in the fireplace. Then I changed my clothes, put on my white burnous, sat in maman’s chair and wrote down the first thing that came into my head.
I needed to be happy, to be hopeful for an hour or two to recharge my batteries or I’d go mad. I wrote stuff down as it came to me, little things, everyday things. I wrote that aunt Sakina and uncle Ali would be happier here in Aïn Deb. The air is fresh, the silence is peaceful. Living on the tenth floor of a tower block on the estate, they never go out, except when aunt Sakina goes shopping with Maïmouna, the old woman who lives down the hall. They always go together, they always buy the same things, pasta, rice, tinned tomatoes and a nice white baguette. In Aïn Deb they’d have the whole countryside, neighbours to look out for them, they wouldn’t have to deal with all the noise, the hassle of living in a city. They could get a couple of chickens, a few goats and the rest would come naturally. The years would go by, they’d get used to things, adapt to the seasons and one day they’d die and it would not be a tragedy but they would not go unmourned. And the cemetery is just down the road, they would be buried with their family, with their people, and go into the next life with them.
I remembered my mates and I thought, now that it was my turn I’d tell them everything. I’d tell them all the things I’d been hiding. They’ve lived in silence and ignorance long enough. Maybe it’s too late, maybe they’ll be hurt when they find out, but maybe it will give them hope, the sort of hope that gives you wings and the urge to fly. This was what I needed, hope, to live and to be happy to wait for tomorrow.
I thought about the estate, and I knew now that we could change it. It would be easy — all we had to do was talk to each other and tell the children everything. The rest would come naturally. Despair would scuttle away having nothing left to cling to. The authorities would have to listen to us, they would see in our eyes what we knew, what we wanted: truth and respect. The jihadists wouldn’t dare come near us, they’d run away — heads down, tails between their legs, beards at half-mast. The devil would take them home and devour them. And that would be that. We’d turn the page and throw the party to end all parties.
I thought about Rachel and I promised myself I’d visit his grave and tell him everything. Tell him that I knew everything, and that, thanks to our diaries, the whole world will know who we are, what we suffered, that we will no longer need to to hide, to be ashamed, to lie.
That night, I didn’t sleep, I spent the whole night talking to my parents like I used to do years ago, talking to Rachel, the way we never did, talking to my mates, the way we soon would. It was like I was happy already.
Note: The way the following chapters are laid out and the excerpts from Rachel’s diary were suggested to me by Madame Dominique G.H.
Rachel visited Istanbul and Cairo in March 1996, after the long trek that started in Frankfurt in June 1995 and took him through Germany, Austria and Poland, ending in Auschwitz in February 1996. With one exception, Rachel followed a logical, necessary route, he retraced papa’s career as it appears in his military record: it begins in Frankfurt, goes on to various camps in Germany and Austria and ends in Poland, not Auschwitz, but at Lublin-Majdanek. There are other postings mentioned in his military record — in France and in Belgium — but Rachel assumed they had nothing to do with the Holocaust. They were brief, probably scientific, stints in Paris, Rocroi, Ghent and elsewhere, places where the Reich didn’t have concentration camps. Papa was a chemical engineer so he might easily have been sent to a factory, or a training centre or one of the laboratories run by the Reich. The one thing I don’t understand is why Rachel made Auschwitz the last stop on his journey, when papa had been there mid-way through his career. Was it because to most people Auschwitz is synonymous with the extermination of the Jews? I don’t think so. Rachel had done his research, he knew the horrors in Auschwitz were no different to any other camps, and besides — as he says in his diary — prisoners were regularly shunted from one camp to another, what they didn’t suffer in one, they suffered in another. Whatever his reasons, it’s obvious that his trip to Auschwitz, more than any of a the others, utterly devastated him. I think it was there, at a very specific moment, that he decided to kill himself — to gas himself — as soon as he got back to Paris. Maybe he’d thought about it before, maybe he’d thought about it from the very beginning back in Aïn Deb, maybe it happened in Uelzen or in Frankfurt, or later in Buchenwald, in Dachau, or during the weeks and months he spent alone in his house after he lost his job, after Ophélie left. Maybe Auschwitz was only a catalyst, a trigger. But maybe, in a very specific way, the scene at Auschwitz he describes at length was what finally decided him.
According to papa’s military record, he was at Lublin-Majdanek when the Nazis were defeated. Soviet troops had marched into Poland and were advancing towards Berlin like a steamroller. After that, there’s no mention of him. Did he and his friends go back to Germany to make a last stand? Did they hide out in Austria, go to ground in Poland? Rachel doesn’t know. Nazi troops were deserting in such numbers and the chaos was so great that one guess is as good as another. The only thing we know for sure is that at some point — in Poland or in Germany — papa made contact with Unit 92 and, with their help, made it to Turkey and from there to Egypt.
I’ve taken some liberties in the way I’ve organised the rest of the chapters, and in the pieces I’ve chosen to include from Rachel’s diary. I’ve moved the section about Istanbul and Cairo to the next chapter, and out of all the stuff he wrote about his long journey through the camps of Germany and Poland, I’ve only kept the piece on Auschwitz, which is in a later chapter. If I’d included everything Rachel wrote, our diaries would have been too long, too terrible to read. Some day, I’ll put everything in one book, but I doubt there are many people who could bear to read it to the end.