of charcoal contaminating his fingers. He covered everything, didn’the? he thought. It’s even in his ears, for God’s sake. “Come on.”On the way home, Mr. Steiner decided to talk politics with the boy asbest he could. Only in the years ahead would Rudy understand it all—when it was too late to bother understanding anything.THE CONTRADICTORY POLITICSOF ALEX STEINERPoint One: He was a member of the Nazi Party, but he did nothate the Jews, or anyone else for that matter.Point Two: Secretly, though, he couldn’t help feeling apercentage of relief (or worse—gladness!) when Jewish shopowners were put out of business—propaganda informed himthat it was only a matter of time before a plague of Jewishtailors showed up and stole his customers.Point Three: But did that mean they should be driven outcompletely?Point Four: His family. Surely, he had to do whatever he could tosupport them. If that meant being in the party, it meant being inthe party.Point Five: Somewhere, far down, there was an itch in his heart,but he made it a point not to scratch it. He was afraid of whatmight come leaking out.They walked around a few corners onto Himmel Street, and Alex said,“Son, you can’t go around painting yourself black, you hear?”Rudy was interested, and confused. The moon was undone now,free to move and rise and fall and drip on the boy’s face, making him nice and murky, like his thoughts. “Why not, Papa?”“Because they’ll take you away.”“Why?”“Because you shouldn’t want to be like black people or Jewishpeople or anyone who is … not us.”“Who are Jewish people?”“You know my oldest customer, Mr. Kaufmann? Where we boughtyour shoes?”“Yes.”“Well, he’s Jewish.”“I didn’t know that. Do you have to pay to be Jewish? Do you needa license?”“No, Rudy.” Mr. Steiner was steering the bike with one hand andRudy with the other. He was having trouble steering theconversation. He still hadn’t relinquished the hold on his son’searlobe. He’d forgotten about it. “It’s like you’re German or Catholic.”“Oh. Is Jesse Owens Catholic?”“I don’t know!” He tripped on a bike pedal then and released theear.They walked on in silence for a while, until Rudy said, “I just wish Iwas like Jesse Owens, Papa.”This time, Mr. Steiner placed his hand on Rudy’s head andexplained, “I know, son—but you’ve got beautiful blond hair and big,safe blue eyes. You should be happy with that; is that clear?”But nothing was clear.Rudy understood nothing, and that night was the prelude of thingsto come. Two and a half years later, the Kaufmann Shoe Shop wasreduced to broken glass, and all the shoes were flung aboard a truckin their boxes.People have defining moments, I suppose, especially when they’rechildren. For some it’s a Jesse Owens incident. For others it’s amoment of bed-wetting hysteria:It was late May 1939, and the night had been like most others. Mamashook her iron fist. Papa was out. Liesel cleaned the front door andwatched the Himmel Street sky.Earlier, there had been a parade.The brown-shirted extremist members of the NSDAP (otherwiseknown as the Nazi Party) had marched down Munich Street, theirbanners worn proudly, their faces held high, as if on sticks. Theirvoices were full of song, culminating in a roaring rendition of“Deutschland über Alles.” “Germany over Everything.”As always, they were clapped.They were spurred on as they walked to who knows where.People on the street stood and watched, some with straight-armedsalutes, others with hands that burned from applause. Some keptfaces that were contorted by pride and rally like Frau Diller, and thenthere were the scatterings of odd men out, like Alex Steiner, whostood like a human-shaped block of wood, clapping slow and dutiful.And beautiful. Submission.On the footpath, Liesel stood with her papa and Rudy. HansHubermann wore a face with the shades pulled down.SOME CRUNCHED NUMBERSIn 1933, 90 percent of Germans showed unflinching support forAdolf Hitler.That leaves 10 percent who didn’t.Hans Hubermann belonged to the 10 percent.There was a reason for that.In the night, Liesel dreamed like she always did. At first, she saw thebrownshirts marching, but soon enough, they led her to a train, andthe usual discovery awaited. Her brother was staring again.When she woke up screaming, Liesel knew immediately that on thisoccasion, something had changed. A smell leaked out from under thesheets, warm and sickly. At first, she tried convincing herself thatnothing had happened, but as Papa came closer and held her, shecried and admitted the fact in his ear.“Papa,” she whispered, “Papa,” and that was all. He could probablysmell it.He lifted her gently from the bed and carried her into thewashroom. The moment came a few minutes later.“We take the sheets off,” Papa said, and when he reached under andpulled at the fabric, something loosened and landed with a thud. Ablack book with silver writing on it came hurtling out and landed onthe floor, between the tall man’s feet.He looked down at it.He looked at the girl, who timidly shrugged.Then he read the title, with concentration, aloud: “The GraveDigger’s Handbook.”So that’s what it’s called, Liesel thought.A patch of silence stood among them now. The man, the girl, thebook. He picked it up and spoke soft as cotton.“Is this yours?”“Yes, Papa.”“Do you want to read it?”Again,“Yes, Papa.”A tired smile. Metallic eyes, melting.“Well, we’d better read it, then.”Four years later, when she came to write in the basement, twothoughts struck Liesel about the trauma of wetting the bed. First, shefelt extremely lucky that it was Papa who discovered the book.(Fortunately, when the sheets had been washed previously, Rosa hadmade Liesel strip the bed and make it up. “And be quick about it,Saumensch! Does it look like we’ve got all day?”) Second, she wasclearly proud of Hans Hubermann’s part in her education. Youwouldn’t think it, she wrote, but it was not so much the school who helpedme to read. It was Papa. People think he’s not so smart, and it’s true thathe doesn’t read too fast, but I would soon learn that words and writingactually saved his life once. Or at least, words and a man who taught himthe accordion …• • •“First things first,” Hans Hubermann said that night. He washed thesheets and hung them up. “Now,” he said upon his return. “Let’s getthis midnight class started.”The yellow light was alive with dust.Liesel sat on cold clean sheets, ashamed, elated. The thought ofbed-wetting prodded her, but she was going to read. She was going toread the book.The excitement stood up in her.Visions of a ten-year-old reading genius were set alight.If only it was that easy.
I subscribed to this blog in recent days I didn’t get these posts in my reader before it came regularly, don’t know what’s the reason so I missed these posts.
Good story