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From
the Motherland Penguin Readers Guide
What
does it mean when you cannot go home again when you
cannot face the past that has rendered you homeless? In 1938,
with the threat of World War 11 forcing them out of their
homes, Frieda and Siegmund Westerfeld placed their twelve-year-old
daughter Edith on an ocean liner bound from Germany to America,
with several other Jewish children destined to become orphaned
refugees. Edith never saw her parents again. They both died
in Nazi death camps before the war was over.
Edith's
life in America was shaped by loss. Without homeland or family,
she lacked proof, and witness, of her childhood. At the age
of sixty-five, long after her parents would have died of old
age had they not perished in the war, she finally agreed to
revisit her small hometown of Stockstadt, Germany. Her daughter,
journalist Fern Schumer Chapman, accompanied her.
This
story the one that Chapman has been waiting her entire
life to write shows how memories can build an identity,
as well as set a life adrift. As an adult, Chapman's mother
had locked her childhood memories away remembering
was too painful. Edith believed that Fern would be able to
transcend the past, while she herself felt she did not deserve
true happiness.
The
return to Edith's homeland, or "motherland," is
both a physical and metaphorical journey. The "motherland"
is a country of the heart, the landscape of a universal maternal
love. In one riveting conversation, Fern asks her mother:
Had Edith been in her parents' place, would she, too, be able
to perform the ultimate sacrifice sending Fern away
forever, orphaning a child to save her life? Is wanting, at
any cost, a better life for your children selfless or selfish?
Chapman's
memoir evokes the legacy of war, passed down unknowingly through
generations. Parenting, she writes, is an opportunity for
redemption. Pregnant with her third child at the time of the
trip, she hopes to repair the mistakes of other generations
and provide her children with a life "free of war."
Returning to Germany, then, is a repossession of the past,
reincarnating it on new terms. Going "beyond" the
Holocaust is moving beyond death in order to reclaim a sense
of memory and self. For Fern and Edith, the trip is also a
chance for their own redemption. By finding out more about
her mother's hidden and powerful past, Fern slowly begins
to understand her mother's silence and to rebuild their relationship.
*
* *
The
townspeople of Stockstadt stared at Edith as if they were
seeing a ghost. In over fifty years, nobody had left the town
except for its two Jewish families: Edith's and her cousin's,
pushed out during the Nazi reign. At an organized reunion
of Edith's elementary class, taut with high emotion and trepidation,
the attendees include the sons and daughters of some of the
town's most notorious Nazis those dubbed the "lucky
late-born" because they were not old enough to participate
in the crimes themselves. Yet "luck" here is a superficial
and loaded term. Neither Edith, nor Fern, nor the residents
of Stockstadt have escaped the war's effects. There are no
more "good Germans," stewing in collective guilt;
everyone has been tainted with the horrors of the past. Many
classmates do not show up to the reunion, and people turn
away when Edith asks for directions to the town's Jewish cemetery.
"We didn't know," her former classmates say. "We
were only children." By not confronting the past, they
avoid remembering a painful time; rebuff any complicity in
the Westerfelds' fate. Perhaps it is denial. Or perhaps it
is impossible to separate the true collaborators from the
unknowing conformists.
Mina,
the Westerfelds' young live-in housekeeper during Edith's
childhood, is one German who refused to forget. When Edith
visits her, now an old woman living in a dilapidated mountain
house, for the first time since the war, it is Edith's turn
to say that she "did not know" what life was really
like for Mina. Continuing to work for the Westerfelds long
after it was acceptable in Germany for non-Jews to associate
with Jewish families, Mina's anti-Nazi leanings branded her
for life: scorned during the war as a Jewish sympathizer and
later, for being a voice of courage in a country deep in denial.
At
her cluttered kitchen table, Mina delivers details from nearly
a half-century ago as if they happened yesterday, pulling
out yellowed papers to pass onto Fern and her children. She
like Edith and Fern and their tour guide, Stockstadt's
local historian, Hans Herrmann never truly let go of
past. For decades, haunted by his own part in the war, Hans
had replayed a similar mental reel of his mistakes. His obsession
with the past impeded his own ability to live in the present.
Nobody,
as Mina's son Jurgen notes, "comes out of this clean
... not even the children." But providing her children
with a clean slate is exactly what Chapman strives to do.
Standing in the basement of her childhood home, now a storefront,
Edith hears her own mother calling her, a voice traveling
across generations and across time. In Germany, Fern learns
that the past had always been alive within her mother, right
under the surface of the present. Fern's grandparents had
lived on, preserved in her memory.
Motherland
teaches that remembering can be a burden or a blessing: the
past can tear people apart, stunt them with regret, paralyze
them with pain. However, it also demonstrates that each generation
has a responsibility to remember, to reshape wounding memories
into redemption and knowledge.
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Edith's family lived in this house in Stockstadt am
Rhein since the 1700s.
Click
for a larger photo
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