Cilka's Journey (ARC)

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Cilka's Journey (ARC) Page 2

by Heather Morris

So, she had allowed herself just one moment of hope,

  sitting in that block back in that place, waiting. She shouldn’t have dared. She is destined to be punished.

  Maybe it is what she deserves. But, as the train gathers

  speed, she vows she will never, ever end up in a place like

  Block 25 again.

  There must be more ways to stay alive than to be witness

  to so much death.

  Will she ever know if her friends who were forced to

  march out of the camp made it to safety? They had to.

  She can’t bear to think otherwise.

  As the rhythm of the train rocks the children and babies

  to sleep, the silence is broken by the howl of a young

  mother holding an emaciated baby in her arms. The child

  has died.

  Cilka wonders what the other women have done to end

  up here. Are they Jewish as well? The women in the prison

  mostly had not been, as she gleaned from overhearing

  various conversations. She wonders where they are going.

  By some miracle, she dozes.

  A sudden braking of the train throws its passengers

  around. Heads bang, limbs are twisted, and their owners

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  cry out in pain. Cilka braces herself by holding on to the woman who has spent the night leaning into her.

  ‘We’re here,’ someone says. But where is here?

  Cilka hears train doors clanging open up ahead, but no

  one leaves their compartments. Their carriage door is flung

  open. Once again, brilliant sunshine stings Cilka’s eyes.

  Two men stand outside. One hands a bucket of water

  to grabbing hands. The second soldier tosses in several

  hunks of bread before slamming the door closed. Semi-

  darkness once again envelops them. A fight breaks out as

  the women scramble for a piece of the bread. A too-familiar

  scene for Cilka. The screaming intensifies until, finally, an older woman stands up, raising her hands, saying nothing,

  and even in the semi-darkness the stance takes up the

  space, and is powerful. Everyone shuts up.

  ‘We share,’ she says, with a voice of authority. ‘How

  many loaves do we have?’ Five hands are raised, indicating

  the number of loaves of bread they have to share.

  ‘Give to the children first, and the rest we will share.

  If anyone doesn’t get any, they will be the first to eat next time. Agreed?’ The women with the bread begin breaking

  off small quantities, handing them to the mothers. Cilka

  misses out. She feels upset. She does not know if it’s the

  best idea to give the food to the children if where they

  are going is like where she has been. It will only be wasted.

  She knows it is a terrible thought.

  For several hours the train sits idle. The women and

  infants fall again into silence.

  The silence is broken by the screams of a girl. As those

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  around her attempt to quieten the girl, to find out what is wrong, she sobs, holding up a blood-covered hand. Cilka

  can see it in the flickering light coming through the gaps.

  ‘I’m dying.’

  The woman nearest her looks down at the blood staining

  her dress.

  ‘She has her period,’ she says. ‘She’s all right, she’s not

  dying.’ The girl continues sobbing.

  The girl sitting at Cilka’s legs, a bit younger than her

  and wearing a similar summer dress, shifts to standing and

  calls out, ‘What’s your name?’

  ‘Ana,’ the girl whimpers.

  ‘Ana, I’m Josie. We will look after you,’ she says, looking

  around the compartment. ‘Won’t we?’

  The women murmur and nod their assent.

  One of the women grasps the girl’s face between her

  hands and brings it towards her own.

  ‘Have you not had a monthly bleed before?’

  The girl shakes her head: no. The older woman clutches

  her to her breast, rocking her, soothing her. Cilka expe-

  riences a strange pang of longing.

  ‘You’re not dying; you’re becoming a woman.’

  Some of the women are already tearing pieces off their

  garments, ripping sections from the bottom of their

  dresses, and passing them along to the woman caring for

  the girl.

  The train jolts forward, dropping Josie to the floor. A

  small giggle escapes from her. Cilka can’t help but giggle

  too. They catch each other’s eye. Josie looks a bit like

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  her friend Gita. Dark brows and lashes, a small, pretty mouth.

  Many hours later, they stop again. Water and bread are

  thrown in. This time, the stop brings additional scrutiny

  and the young mother is forced to hand over her dead

  infant to the soldiers. She has to be restrained from trying

  to leave the compartment to be with her dead child. The

  slamming of the door brings her silence as she is helped

  into a corner to grieve her loss.

  Cilka sees how closely Josie watches it all, with her hand

  against her mouth. ‘Josie, is it?’ Cilka asks the girl who

  has been leaning against her since they first got on the

  train. She asks her in Polish, the language she has heard

  her using.

  ‘Yes.’ Josie slowly manoeuvres her way round so they

  are knee to knee.

  ‘I’m Cilka.’

  Their conversation opener seems to embolden other

  women. Cilka hears others ask their neighbours their

  names, and soon the compartment is filled with whispered

  chatter. Languages are identified, and a shuffling takes

  place to put nationalities together. Stories are shared. One

  woman was accused of aiding the Nazis by allowing them

  to buy bread from her bakery in Poland. Another was

  arrested for translating German propaganda. Yet another

  was captured by the Nazis and, being caught with them,

  accused of spying for them. Amazingly, there are bursts

  of laughter along with tears as each woman shares how

  they ended up in this predicament. Some of the women

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  confirm the train will be going to a labour camp, but they don’t know where.

  Josie tells Cilka that she is from Kraków, and that she’s

  sixteen years old. Cilka opens her mouth to share her own

  age and place of birth, but before she can, a woman nearby

  declares in a loud voice, ‘I know why she’s here.’

  ‘Leave her alone,’ comes from the strong older woman

  who’d suggested sharing the bread.

  ‘But I saw her, dressed in a fur coat in the middle of

  winter while we were dying from the cold.’

  Cilka remains silent. There’s a creeping heat in her neck.

  She lifts her head and stares at her accuser. A stare the

  woman cannot match. She vaguely recognises her. Wasn’t

  she, too, one of the old-timers in Birkenau? Did she not

  have a warm and comfortable job in the administration

  building?

  ‘And you, you who wants to accuse her,’ says the older

  woman, ‘why are you h
ere, in this luxurious carriage with

  us going on a summer holiday?’

  ‘Nothing, I did nothing,’ comes the weak reply.

  ‘We all did nothing,’ Josie says strongly, defending her

  new friend.

  Cilka clenches her jaw as she turns away from the

  woman.

  She can feel Josie’s gentle, reassuring eyes on her face.

  Cilka throws her a faint smile, before turning her head

  to the wall, closing her eyes, trying to block the sudden

  memory flooding in of Schwarzhuber – the officer in charge

  of Birkenau – standing over her in that small room,

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  loosening his belt, the sounds of women weeping beyond the wall.

  * * *

  The next time the train stops, Cilka gets her ration of

  bread. Instinctively she eats half and tucks the rest into

  the top of her dress. She looks around, fearful someone

  might be watching and try to take it from her. She turns

  her face back to the wall, closing her eyes.

  Somehow, she sleeps.

  As she floats back awake, she is startled by Josie’s pres-

  ence right in front of her. Josie reaches out and touches

  Cilka’s close-cropped hair. Cilka tries to resist the auto-

  matic urge to push her away.

  ‘I love your hair,’ the sad, tired voice says.

  Relaxing, Cilka reaches up and touches the younger

  girl’s bluntly chopped hair.

  ‘I like yours too.’

  Cilka had been freshly shaved and deloused at the

  prison. For her a familiar process, as she saw it happen

  so often to prisoners in that other place, but she supposes it is new for Josie.

  Desperate to change the subject, she asks, ‘Are you here

  with anyone?’

  ‘I’m with my grandma.’

  Cilka follows Josie’s eyes to the bold older woman who

  had spoken up earlier, still with an arm around the young

  girl, Ana. She is watching the two of them closely. They

  exchange a nod.

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  ‘You might want to get closer to her,’ Cilka says.

  Where they are going, the older woman may not last long.

  ‘I should. She might be frightened.’

  ‘You’re right. I am too,’ Cilka says.

  ‘Really? You don’t look frightened.’

  ‘Oh, I am. If you want to talk again, I will be here.’

  Josie steps carefully over and around the other women

  between Cilka and her grandmother. Cilka looks on

  through the slats of light coming through the carriage. A

  small smile breaks free as she sees and feels the women

  shuffle and shift to accommodate her new friend.

  * * *

  ‘It’s been nine days, I think. I’ve been counting. How

  much longer?’ Josie murmurs to no one in particular.

  There is more room in the compartment now. Cilka has

  kept count of how many have died, sick, starving or

  wounded from their prior interrogations, their bodies

  removed when the train stops for bread and water. Eleven

  adults, four infants. Occasionally some fruit is thrown in

  with the dry husks of bread, which Cilka has seen mothers

  soften in their own mouths for the children.

  Josie now lies curled up beside Cilka, her head resting

  on Cilka’s lap. Her sleep is fitful. Cilka knows of the images that must be racing through her mind. A few days ago,

  her grandmother died. She had seemed so strong and

  bold, but then she’d started coughing, worse and worse,

  and shaking, and then refusing her own ration of food.

  And then the coughing stopped.

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  Cilka watched Josie standing mutely at the compartment door as her grandmother’s body was roughly handed down

  to the waiting guards. Cilka experienced a physical pain

  so intense she doubled over, all her breath leaving her.

  But no sound, and no tears, would come.

  Auschwitz, 1942

  Hundreds of girls are marched from Auschwitz to Birkenau

  on a hot summer day. Four kilometres. A slow, painful

  march for many who have ill-fitting boots, or worse, no

  footwear. As they enter through the large imposing brick

  archway they see the construction of blocks. Men working

  there pause to stare in horror at the new arrivals. Cilka and her sister Magda have been at Auschwitz for around three

  months, working among other Slovakian girls.

  They are turned from the main road through the camp

  and into a fenced-off area, with several buildings complete, and others underway. They are stopped and held, standing

  in lines, as the sun beats down upon them for what seems

  like hours.

  From behind, they hear a commotion. Cilka looks back

  to the entrance of the women’s camp to see a senior officer, with an entourage of men following, walking up the row

  of girls. Most of the girls keep their heads down. Not Cilka.

  She wants to see who warrants such protection from a group of unarmed, defenceless girls.

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  ‘ Obersturmführer Schwarzhuber ,’ a guard says, greeting the senior officer. ‘You’ll be overseeing the selection today?’

  ‘I will.’

  The senior officer, Schwarzhuber, continues walking down

  the line of girls and women. He pauses briefly as he passes Cilka and Magda. When he gets to the front of the row, he turns and walks back. This time he can see the turned-down faces. Occasionally he uses his swagger stick pushed under the chin to raise the face of a girl.

  He is coming closer. He stops beside Cilka, Magda behind

  her. He raises his stick. Cilka beats him to it and lifts her chin high, looking directly at him. If she can get his attention he will ignore her sister. He reaches down and lifts her left arm, appearing to look at the numbers fading on her

  skin. Cilka hears Magda’s sharp inhalation of breath behind her. Schwarzhuber drops her arm, walks back down to the

  front of the line, and Cilka notices him speak to the SS

  officer beside him.

  * * *

  They have been sorted, again. Left, right; hearts banging,

  bodies clenched in fear. Cilka and Magda have been chosen to live another day. They are now in the line to be painfully marked again – to have their tattoos re-inked so they will never fade. They stand close but not touching, though they desperately want to comfort each other. They whisper as

  they wait – consoling, wondering.

  Cilka counts the number of girls in front of her. Five. It will soon be her turn, and then Magda’s. Again, she will

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  hand her left arm over to someone to have the blurred blue numbers punctured into her skin. First she was marked on

  entering Auschwitz three months ago, now again after being re-selected for the new camp, Auschwitz II: Birkenau. She begins to shiver. It is summer, the sun blazes down on her.

  She fears the pain she will soon experience. The first time, she cried out in shock. This time, she tells herself she will remain silent. Though she is still only sixteen, she can no longer behave like a child.

  Peering out from the row of girls, she watches the

  Tätowierer . He looks into the eyes of the girl whose
arm

  he holds. She sees him place a finger to his lips and mouth, shhh. He smiles at her. He looks down to the ground as

  the girl walks away, then looks up to watch her moving on.

  He takes the arm of the next girl in line and doesn’t see that the previous girl turns back to look at him.

  Four. Three. Two. One. It is now her turn. She glances

  quickly and reassuringly back at Magda, then moves forward.

  She stands in front of the Tätowierer , her left arm by her side. He reaches down and gently lifts her arm up. She

  surprises herself by pulling it free, an almost unconscious reaction, causing him to look at her, to look into her eyes, which she knows are filled with anger, disgust, at having to be defiled, again.

  ‘I’m sorry. I’m so sorry,’ he whispers gently to her. ‘Please, give me your arm.’

  Moments pass. He makes no attempt to touch her. She

  raises her arm and offers it to him.

  ‘Thank you,’ he mouths. ‘It’ll be over quickly.’

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  With blood dripping from her arm, though not as much as last time, Cilka whispers, ‘Be gentle with my sister,’

  before moving on as slowly as she can so Magda will be

  able to catch up. She looks curiously around for the girl who’d been in front of her. She glances back at the

  Tätowierer . He has not watched her walk away. She sees

  the girl who’d been five in front of her standing outside Block 29 and joins her and the others waiting to be admitted into their ‘home’. She studies the girl. Even with her head shaven, the baggy dress hiding whatever curves she may

  have, or once had, she is beautiful. Her large dark eyes show no signs of the despair Cilka has seen in so many. She wants to get to know this girl who made the Tätowierer stare.

  Soon, Magda joins her, wincing from the pain of the tattoo.

  They’re temporarily out of sight of any guards and Cilka

  clutches her sister’s hand.

  That evening, as the girls in Hut 29 each find a space in a bunk to share with several others and cautiously enquire to one another, ‘Where are you from?’ Cilka learns the girl’s name is Gita. She comes from a village in Slovakia, not too far from Cilka and Magda’s town of Bardejov. Gita introduces Cilka and Magda to her friends Dana and Ivanka.

  The next day, following rollcall, the girls are sent to their work area. Cilka is pulled aside, not sent like the others to work in the Kanada, where they sort out the belongings,

  jewellery and heirlooms brought to Auschwitz by the pris-

  oners, and prepare much of it for return to Germany. Instead, by special request, she is to report to the administration building, where she will work.

 

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