The hole in my leg

Last night I had the strangest dream. I was back on the kibbutz, lying in bed with you… We lay there laughing and talking. We had been lying there for weeks, maybe months, and neither of us felt any urge to get up. It suddenly occurred to me that there was something on my right ankle or just above it. I looked down to find that my skin had folded over and made a crease because I had been lying down for so long. When I straightened my leg and the crease of skin ironed out there was a huge, perfectly circular hole in my leg. The skin had been torn and all the flesh eaten away at. I stared at the hole, intrigued by its precise hollowness. I realised it had all started from something beautiful. A beautiful butterfly had flown into the room and found a spot on my leg just above my ankle bone. Somehow, as I was lying on the bed, it became trapped. As weeks passed by and the skin folded over it, the butterfly began eating away at my flesh. Now all that remained was the hole. You assured me that once I stood up and started to move again the skin would grow back and the hole would fill in. But neither of us wanted to get up. As I noticed the hole in more detail I became more fascinated by it.

Complacency is a dangerous friend to have. In its safe familiarity it offers comfort and warmth, yet invite it in and it will not get up from your couch. Offer it a drink and it will invariably overstay its welcome. It often comes disguised as the exact thing you had been searching for so long; your chance to escape vanishing before your eyes once you recognise it for the exact thing you had been trying so hard to avoid. Two people meet and in the flash of that instant their lives change forever. They lock hearts and minds, often through no choice of their own, and a chain of events is suddenly set in motion. There is no way of knowing how bad this choice of friendship will be in years to come. There is no way of foretelling how badly they will hurt one another; how desperate they will become to rid each other of their own memory. The dangerous complacency will set in amongst them both and for a period of time, perhaps even years, none will be the wiser. Until the day comes when they find themselves filled with such hate they will be unrecognisable to others.

Tami and I never actually met officially. We were born in the same year on the same kibbutz in the northern part of Israel, where the Sea of Galilee meets the Jezriel Valley. Our parents had arrived at the kibbutz within years of each other, from South Africa. Unaware of each other’s existence in South Africa, once they were acquainted in Israel our two families connected instantly and became close friends, offering each other support and comfort during the initial difficult years of settling into a new environment. Tami and I were born within months of each other. For years I was fed stories of how we quickly became inseparable once we reached the age where we began noticing existence of life beyond our own mothers. There are countless snaps of memories to prove this fact. Starting from the day I rolled over onto her, followed by the glints of smiles our parents wore as we both rose from the floor. Tami and Tali. Sure to be friends for life, if only because their names both began and ended with the same letters.

Convenience is another silent killer. It creeps up on you even when you’re wide awake and aware. You realise that the only reason you accept its invitation is easiness, and laziness, and you convince yourself there’s nothing wrong with that. Why should we make life more difficult for ourselves? Why should we always be looking for the harder, less travelled path? How many people seem to walk through life unconsciously, with their eyes half closed, somehow always seemingly making it through to the other side with painless ease and grace? Why, god dammit, can’t you be one of those people just for once, you ask yourself.

Mum was never really a good judge of anything. Of course I only learnt this gradually and only decided to embrace it as an adult. During my childhood it was a flaw that I often found myself making excuses for. I grew up feeling sorry for my mum. I felt bad that she had left her own family behind to come to Israel and make a new start with dad. I felt bad that she had left all her childhood friends and memories and start again. I felt bad that at the age of 23 she had to learn a new language for the first time in her life. I felt bad that she always talked about what was missing; what had been taken from her – the incredible life she had left behind filled with riches, comfort, good friends and expensive clothes. So I guess my compensation was myself. I put myself after everything; her, her needs, her grudges, her guilt. I learnt to hide in shadows from a young age. I sat behind, I stayed behind, I kept quiet. I became a really good listener as a result. Nodding was a refined practice of mine. I agreed to everything because the alternative was to cause her even more sorrow. Tami was one of the things I never questioned. As I ensconced myself in her shadow, my friendship with Tami solidified mum’s friendship with her parents and thereby gave her security in return. The kibbutz was the kind of place that looked wonderful and warm from the outside in. Once you stepped inside and noticed all the cracks and dysfunction, you realised quickly that to resist it was futile. In order to deal with the daily dose of mad normality you needed good friends around you constantly. Often this meant hiding in each other’s shadows as you walked around.

Acceptance is the third in a line of evil friends to have. It’s the hardest one to befriend because it signals the end of independence. It’s also the hardest one to resist. It flirts with you as it shows you how easy it can be. It plays with your head as it parades past taunting you with things you could have or could be or could do. And as it goes by it bulldozes the path less travelled that you look onto as you realise your time has passed. It dazzles you with materials and fools you with glittery visions of how life should be. And as it takes its final bow the door bangs shut and you are stuck there. All you have in front of you is a mirror with you as reflection, taking your final bow. It is only when the pain becomes too much to bear; when the longing for yourself and what you used to look like becomes so overwhelming; when the hurt has stung a hole so deep it touches the edges of love slightly enough for a spark to trigger inside and a memory of what love once felt like that you will finally get up and do anything in your power to kick your new friends out. All three of them.

You many wonder why I’ve chosen to tell you this now. You may think it unfair or biased or even immature of me to reveal these inner thoughts of mine at this particular juncture in time. And it’s unfortunate that life made us meet now and not at some other more suitable point. But as I’ve passed through various places I’ve slowly realised that not everyone deserves a place in my heart. Not everyone gets to stay a while. Perhaps you didn’t expect to read it in a letter. Perhaps you were waiting for me to visit you in person and say it to your face. There is no way you could have known what the mention of her name does to my insides. I don’t blame you for a second nor do I think any less of you for it. What I need you to understand is that I cannot go back there, not ever again. It took me years and years to fill that hole. It took me hours of convincing myself that I would eventually be all right. It took me days and days to get up and walk again. It took so long before someone else stopped to ask if I was okay as I stumbled my way down the path. You were the first person I trusted again. You were the one whose rich soil lined the final surface of my wound before the skin grew back to conceal it. Although things didn’t work out for us romantically I treasure your friendship like the most precious stone. I will keep this stone close to my heart forever. Sometimes life does things to convince me that there is no such thing as a coincidence. I am at a solid place now and you have given me all that I need to take. Go to her and be happy, but I cannot come with.

Pearls are what you get from those who love you. So that you can take them and rub them until they shine. After you have treated every single one with the love you feel in return, use them to fill up your hole – hollow and eaten-through, raw and empty. And when it is full to the brim you will appreciate the strength you gained both from the gouge you received and the pearls you used to repair it. Last night I had a dream, but after writing you this letter I realise it wasn’t strange at all.

What does Henry Kissinger have to do with it?

My grandmother went to school with Henry Kissinger. Although they never really shared anything beyond a class photo it is a fact that remains after many others have disappeared to that place where forgotten memories pile up like stock to be counted. Sometimes I wish I could find the pile so that I could discover other cool facts to share. Yet I know that what ends up in the pile desperately wants to be forgotten forever. There are some things we drag along with us though, despite their ugliness, their bitterness and the pain their memories cause. We pull them along in the hope they will keep us grounded in the place just in-between remembering and forgetting, so that we won’t be dragged down by them – or led astray without them. In reality though my life is so far removed from that of my grandmother’s that the fact she and Sir Kissinger shared a photo once upon a time seems ludicrous to me.

My grandmother also once came home with shit smothered in her hair. She was a beautiful lady and as a girl was tall, voluptuous and vivacious. She would light up eyes with her smiles and when she laughed her whole body would dance ever so elegantly. The only problem was she was Jewish in Germany. So when she came home one day covered in brown manure, smelling awful and crying with shame the fact that she was once at school with Henry Kissinger made no difference at all. This story is one of those memories I drag along with me, hoping it will keep me in that place that stops you from going numb from the senseless bullshit we seem to be smeared in ourselves every day that in turn keeps us from smelling what is actually happening around us.

Janine Schloss' Grandmother

If I look around me I can find lots of similar memories to drag around. I don’t need to look too far to find words like apartheid, Nazi, death camps, survivor, genocide and bloodshed in relation to my recent past. Yet every day, as the news of the world I live in uses words that are associated with my personal lexicon of horrific history; as killings and hate fill the screens of our news broadcasts to the point where it almost appears that the world is exaggerating I feel the numbness setting in and taking over. As the words become louder and seem to be drawing closer my stories about Henry Kissinger feel even more far-fetched than ever before.

This week while the world remembers the Holocaust I will remember my grandmother. She didn’t manage to meet Henry Kissinger again, although she did send him a letter once with a copy of her class photo attached. She did escape genocide though and just like him went on to live a relatively comfortable life in a world so far away from the one she was almost exhumed by. Yet as I remember her, I realise she was one of many and for each of her hundreds more didn’t get away in time. I sit here and think of her and no matter how hard I try I cannot envisage the place her home in Germany became as the Nazi regime set in. It is as far away to me and my comfortable life as Syria, Egypt, Sudan, Ukraine, Afghanistan and North Korea are.

This week people will flick through posts about Holocaust commemoration, just as they flick through updates about asylum seekers on our shores and war-torn places that all blend into one big mess they brush aside and put in a place they can refer to when it suits them to feel politically active. What are human rights? Shouldn’t that be a rhetorical question? On the one hand it seems so crazy to think that they need to be contested at all. On the other hand, as I put pieces of bits of war, bloodshed, racism, senseless killings and thoughtless hate-crimes together with the memory of my grandmother and the fate she was saved from the recent past suddenly morphs into the present and human rights sound like something the lucky few stumble upon.

Yet still this week will pass and nothing will have changed. I will carry on as you will. You might keep in your memory an interesting fact about my grandmother and Henry Kissinger but the world will go on and people will get away with murder. Women will be raped. Children will be tortured. Communities will be excluded. Soldiers will lose their lives. Borders will be crossed in the dead of night offering a glimpse of hope and we will carry on sighing together because the life we take for granted has so many of its own issues and problems that we so flippantly forget how lucky we are. And as hard as I try to actually see Henry Kissinger himself; to see the little boy who escaped Nazi Germany and became state secretary standing in front of me –I cannot. Until I am literally knocked over with a real-life pot I will continue to inhale the apathy drug that puts so many of us to sleep comfortably and enables us to live relatively unaccountably.

When I was much younger I dealt with the harsh realities of war that I learnt about in textbooks with the naïve notion that they occurred in some faraway time when people were monsters intermittently and for a lapse in time didn’t care about each other. That couldn’t happen now, I’d tell my much younger self; people couldn’t possibly let that happen now. And now, years later, as I read headlines of ‘never again’ and ‘lest we forget’, my naivety shines with obviousness. How did World War II happen? Did people get away with genocide simply because it wasn’t televised? What about when it was? What about Bosnia and Herzegovina? What about Rwanda? What about Sudan? What about Nigerian school girls getting kidnapped by the hundreds and used as sex slaves? This is just a brief list of the things we know about – what about the things we don’t know? Would it make a difference? Would you let it happen? What could you do to stop it?

Henry Kissinger, my grandmother and a long line of others were simply lucky. Luck is what saves some and drowns others; it is what feeds babies and lets others starve to death. I have seen how genocide is allowed to happen. It happens just as easily as we switch channels and switch off screens. How do we get away with simply saying ‘oh that’s terrible’ and ‘how can we let this happen?’ How do we walk past indifference in our own backyards and not get knocked over the head by its relevance? We wake up with this drive in our core to change the world and then we go to sleep drunk on the comfort of our own immediate surroundings. We say we care just as quickly as we order another latte and get on with life. We use the same signature to sign a petition as we do to sign a credit card receipt. We say we care. We say we understand. We say our grandmothers were refugees as well. We say our families also arrived on boats. Again we say we care while we thank our lucky stars we weren’t born in that faraway place where people are monsters and nobody cares about each other.