13 May 2012

If there is a man ...

... is the autobiography by Primo Levi about how he saves his scaffold at Auschwitz.  I started it on a rainy, grey day and finished it when the sun finally arrives.  One of those rare books changing your perspective on the essence of being a human, a man ...

Sooner or later in life everyone discovers that perfect happiness is unrealisable, but there are few who pause to consider the antithesis: the perfect unhappiness is equally unattainable.  The obstacles preventing the realisation of both these extremes states are of the same nature: they derive from our human condition which is opposed to everything infinite.  Our ever-sufficient knowledge of the future opposes it: and this is called, in the one instance, hope, and in the other, uncertainty of the following day.  The certainty of death opposes it: for it places a limit on every joy, but also of every grief.  The inevitable material cares oppose it: for as they poison every lasting happiness, they equally assiduously distract us from our misfortunes and make our consciousness of them intermittent and hence supportable ...

...Then for the first time we became aware that our language lacks word to express this offence, the demolition of a man.  In a moment, with almost prophetic intuition, the reality was revealed to us: we have reached the bottom.  It is not possible to sink lower than this; no human condition is more miserable than this, nor could it conceivably be so.  Nothing belongs to us any more; they have taken away our clothes, our shoes, even our hair; if we speak, they will not listen to us, and if they listen, they will not understand.  They will even take away our name: and if we want to keep it, we will have to find ourselves the strength to do so, to manage somewhere so that behind the names something of us, of us as we were, still remains.

We know that we will have difficulty in being understood, and this is as it should be.  But consider what value, what meaning is enclosed even in the smallest of our daily habits, in the hundred possessions which even the poorest beggar owns; a handkerchief, an old letter, the photo of a cherish person.  These things are part of us, almost like limbs of our body; nor is it conceivable that we can be deprived of them in our word, for we immediately find others to substitute the old ones, other objects which re ours in their personification and evocation of our memories.

Imagine now a man who is deprived of everyone he loves, and at the same time of his house, his habits, his clothes, in short, of everything he possess: he will be a hollow man, reduced to suffering and needs, forgetful of dignity and restraint, for he who loses all often easily loses himself.  He will be a man whose life or death can be lightly decided with no sense of human affinity, in the most fortunate of cases, on the basis of a pure judgement of utility.  It is in this way that one can understand the double sense of the term "extermination camp", and it is now clear what we seek to express with the phrase: "to lie on the bottom" ...

... It grieves me because it means that I have to translate his uncertain Italian and his quiet manner of speaking of a good soldier into my language of an incredulous man.  But this was the sense, not forgotten either then or later: that precisely because the Lager was a great machine to reduce us to beasts, we must not become beasts; that even in this place one can survive, and therefore one must want to survive, to tell the story, to bear witness; and that to survive we must force ourselves to save at least the skeleton, the scaffolding, the form of civilisation.  We are slaves, deprived of every right, exposed to every insult, condemned to certain death, but we still possess one power, and we must defend it with all our strength for it is the last - the power to refuse our consent.  So we must certainly wash our faces without soap in dirty water and dry ourselves with our jackets.  We must polish our shoes, not because the regulation states it, but for dignity and propriety.  We must walk erect, without dragging our feet, not in homage to Prussian discipline but to remain alive, not to begin to die.

For human nature is such that grief and pain - even simultaneously suffered - do not add up as a whole in our consciousness, but hide, the lesser behind the greater, according to a definite law of perspective.  It is providential and is our means of surviving the camp.  And this is the reason why so often in free life often hears it said that man is never content.  In fact it is not a question of a human incapacity for a state of absolute happiness, but of an ever-insufficient knowledge of the complete nature of the state of unhappiness; so that the single name of the major cause is given to all its causes, which are composite and set out in an order of urgency.  And if the most immediate cause of stress comes to an end, you are grievously amazed to see that another one lies behind; and in reality a whole series of others ...

... However little sense there may be in trying to specify why I, rather than thousands of others, managed to survive the test, I believe that it was really due to Lorenzo that I am alive today; and not so much for his material aid, as for his having constantly remind me by his presence, by his natural and plain manner of being good, that there still existed a just world outside of our own, something and someone still pure and whole, not corrupt, not savage, extraneous to hatred and terror something difficult to define, a remote possibility of good, but for which it was worth surviving.