Ear­li­er this week, Mar­gare­ta Ack­er­man wrote about try­ing to rec­on­cile her gran­fa­ther’s hap­py per­son­al­i­ty with the hor­rors he suf­fered dur­ing the Holo­caust. Her recent­ly pub­lished book, Run­ning from Giants: The Holo­caust Through The Eyes of a Child, is now avail­able. She has been blog­ging here for the Jew­ish Book Coun­cil and MyJew­ish­Learn­ing all week.

It was a day like any oth­er. I was absorbed in the details of my life, answer­ing an over­flow­ing stack of emails and wor­ry­ing about triv­ial things, when the phone rang.

We’re done trans­lat­ing Grandpa’s notes,” said my dad. Would you, by some chance, be will­ing to go over them and turn them into a book?” 

Of course!” I replied right away. It sound­ed like no more than a thor­ough edit­ing job. It struck me that my dad was sur­prised by my quick reply. 

He sent the notes over. Grand­pa Sru­lik spent a cou­ple of months writ­ing about his life. Then, my broth­er and father trans­lat­ed his notes from Russ­ian to English. 

I print­ed the trans­la­tion and read over the notes in min­utes; ten pages to sum­ma­rize the life of a man who had had suf­fered enough heartache to fill a thou­sand life­times. As I read, I recalled him speak­ing about his life. I could see his mus­cles tense at some par­tic­u­lar­ly dif­fi­cult parts of his sto­ry. Read­ing oth­er sec­tions, I could hear him let out a hearty laugh as he tried to light­en the load on both the lis­ten­er and him­self by find­ing bits of humor in his infi­nite­ly painful life. 

Yet, with­out know­ing my grand­pa, or at least hav­ing heard his sto­ry first­hand, these notes were not enough; with­out him to per­son­al­ly bring them to life, the words lay flat on the page. I couldn’t leave it at that. That’s when I under­stood what I had signed up for, and why my dad was so sur­prised by my quick reply. Yet, I was cer­tain­ly not about to change my mind. This may take a while, maybe as long as three months, but I am going to do it, I thought. 

I spent many hours talk­ing with Grand­pa, try­ing to get as much infor­ma­tion as pos­si­ble. This was no easy task. Grand­pa didn’t like talk­ing about his past. More often than not, he would sim­ply reply, I already wrote about that, go look at my notes.” I had to keep the con­ver­sa­tions brief, and omit some ques­tions alto­geth­er, so as not to upset him. Through these unof­fi­cial inter­views, I learned much more about my grandpa’s life than I thought there was to know. 

Grandpa’s orig­i­nal notes had only a few sen­tences devot­ed to his life before the war. I felt that this wasn’t enough. I spent many months work­ing on the ear­ly part of his mem­oir, famil­iar­iz­ing the read­er with his warm, lov­ing fam­i­ly of ori­gin, and show­ing what was nor­mal for him before the Nazi occupation. 

The fol­low­ing sec­tion, detail­ing Srulik’s ini­tial escape from the Nazis, was more dif­fi­cult to write. It was hard to iden­ti­fy with hor­rors of such pro­por­tion. But after many con­ver­sa­tions with Grand­pa, I was final­ly con­tent with that part of the book.

Then, it was time to write about the worst of it: the Nazi ghet­to. I spent hours star­ing at an emp­ty screen, not able to type as much as a sin­gle word. After many failed attempts to con­tin­ue writ­ing, I was close to giv­ing up alto­geth­er. Did I bite off more than I could chew? Who am I to write about a tragedy this large? I hadn’t wrote a word in three months.

Guilt kept eat­ing away at me. Unsure how to pro­ceed, I decid­ed to turn to oth­ers’ mem­oirs. There I was, read­ing Maus, Art Spiegelman’s heart­felt com­ic about his dad’s expe­ri­ence in the Holo­caust, and in its pages I saw the same fears that I was deal­ing with. Some part of me doesn’t want to draw or think about Auschwitz,” writes Spiegel­man, I can’t visu­al­ize it clear­ly, and I can’t begin to imag­ine what it felt like.”

Real­iz­ing that I was not the only one strug­gling to relay to the read­er such hor­rif­ic events gave me strength to car­ry on. I buck­led down and wrote a para­graph. By the time that para­graph was over, so was my abil­i­ty to con­tin­ue writ­ing for the evening. I wrote the third part of the book lit­er­al­ly one para­graph a day. 

I then quick­ly put togeth­er the fourth, and final, part of the book, about Grandpa’s final escape and his two years hid­ing in the forests. The writ­ing was done. I couldn’t believe it. 

By the time the book was writ­ten, edit­ed, illus­trat­ed, and pub­lished, three and half years had passed. This project called on all of my crit­i­cal, cre­ative, and emo­tion­al capac­i­ties, and became one of the most impor­tant and per­son­al­ly sig­nif­i­cant projects I’d ever done. 

Writ­ing about the Holo­caust is hard. For­get writ­ing — even read­ing about it is hard. Although I wrote my Grandpa’s mem­oir, and read every word in it count­less times, some parts still bring me to tears. Even today, there are sec­tions that I pre­fer to skip when I leaf through the book. 

Yet, despite how dif­fi­cult it is, it is cru­cial that we record this dark chap­ter in our his­to­ry. We, the chil­dren and grand­chil­dren of Holo­caust sur­vivors, have a big respon­si­bil­i­ty before us. It is our duty to pass on the sto­ries of our loves ones. It might be hard to appre­ci­ate the impor­tance of our work today — but too soon, the writ­ten word will be the only thing left to trans­mit their mem­o­ries, and pro­tect the integri­ty of this dark part in our history. 

Mar­gare­ta Ack­er­man is a pro­fes­sor, researcher, author and grand­daugh­ter of Holo­caust sur­vivor Sru­lik Ack­er­man. She received her Ph.D. in Com­put­er Sci­ence from the Uni­ver­si­ty of Water­loo, Cana­da, and has won numer­ous awards for her research. Dr. Ack­er­man is the author of over a dozen aca­d­e­m­ic pub­li­ca­tions, includ­ing research on appli­ca­tions of tra­di­tion­al Jew­ish study method­ol­o­gy to the mod­ern class­room. She is join­ing the fac­ul­ty of Flori­da State Uni­ver­si­ty this year.

Relat­ed Content:

Mar­gare­ta Ack­er­man is a pro­fes­sor, researcher, author and grand­daugh­ter of Holo­caust sur­vivor Sru­lik Ack­er­man. She received her Ph.D. in Com­put­er Sci­ence from the Uni­ver­si­ty of Water­loo, Cana­da, and has won numer­ous awards for her research. Dr. Ack­er­man is the author of over a dozen aca­d­e­m­ic pub­li­ca­tions, includ­ing research on appli­ca­tions of tra­di­tion­al Jew­ish study method­ol­o­gy to the mod­ern class­room. She is join­ing the fac­ul­ty of Flori­da State Uni­ver­si­ty this year.

Holo­caust Edu­ca­tion: The Miss­ing Piece

Writ­ing About The Holocaust