Threadbare Stars
At the Auschwitz concentration camp, the dead fell from the clouds.
White ash and snow mingled in the gray of the sky, indistinguishable from each other. Above, the fires of death came down with a Siberian frigidity.
We stood in a line, single file. My shirt itched against my body, but discomfort was the most unpleasant beneath my star. The extra cloth rubbed against my skin with each movement, forming a star-shaped abrasion underneath.
Ahead, a man strolled through our ranks. It was clear that he held himself higher than the rest of us. An SS badge stamped carefully on his chest, the officer marched purposefully in my direction. His eyes scanned the prisoner’s shirts with determination, bleeding coldly through our stitched numbers and homespun stars.
Pink, red, blue. These colors clung to our shirts, tattered banners of imprisonment. A patchwork symphony, a leather storybook. A shopworn constellation, lost and forgotten in the gray of the sky.
I stood, shaking from the effort, the green star burning a hole in my chest. Snow and death piled on my shoulders. Visible through the cold, my breath collected in small clouds of ash.
In, out. Closer. In, out. Closer. In went the air and out came the ash. Burning with each breath, my dry lungs choked on the cold air. Just as the officer approached me, a cloud of chilly air left my mouth. The vapor dissipated across the officer’s face, settling as a mist on his glasses. His eyes, partly concealed, fixed on my shirt’s number.
“Prisoner 1048,” he said.
The man stared coldly into my eyes, and only then could I truly see him. I could see the fire in his eyes and feel the poison in his breath, his arms like twin lightning bolts. He was the one who flourished in death, the nightmare of nightmares.
And so I looked into the eyes of this man, eyes that had forgotten the goodness of the world. I looked into the darkness behind his gaze, studied the face that smiled in spite of the death around him.
“Prisoner 1048!”
I nodded quickly, hardly moving my head but still showing the extent of my comprehension. He glared back with his thousand eyes, and I looked back with a fragile defiance, as broken as the air around me.
Ultimately, his gaze rested on my lime green star, the symbol for criminals. Licking his lips, the man continued his monologue.
“Prisoner. Criminal. You are no longer either of these things. From this day forth, you will be known as Kapo.”
I had not known of the torment of the kapos, the regret that would stay with them for the rest of their lives. Instead, I was beside myself with joy. I knew of the hearty meals, the fancy armbands, the lack of work, and the eternal power. People would fear me, and I would fear no one.
I would be a leader, an almighty Kapo.
The officer led me to a large room, where he gave me civilian clothes and an armband, symbolizing my rank. Unlike my star, the armband felt like armor. With it, I could do anything. My rank by itself would take blows for me: I would be invincible.
He said that my job would be a Vorarbeiter, or a foreman. My task was simple: supervise the prisoners, and keep them in line. That meant beating those that did not work hard enough, and shooting those that did not work at all.
Then he led me out of the room and back onto the the field. Roll call was over, and prisoners trudged across the dreary landscape, gray against gray.
The officer said one last thing before he left.
“Remember, prisoner. You’re now a leader of the workers out there, but that doesn’t make you one of us. If you don’t do your job, then I won’t hesitate to bring you down.”
His words poured out in a breath of poison, his eyes burning with fire.
And then he handed me the gun.
Sleek, black, metallic.
When I had imagined what it felt like to hold a gun, I thought of a tremendous burden. The sights would be a display of your victim’s torment, a window into a lifetime of regret. I expected the barrel to split in two: for every one you kill, you kill yourself too. But when I grabbed the gun, it felt like a part of me. It's trigger was easily in reach. Death was an extra appendage that I could practice with.
Now I understood the way the Nazis must have felt. It wasn’t ending a life, watching families mourn upon the freezing fires of death. It wasn’t killing a child’s laugh, ending a parent’s hope, or ruining a perfect image of happiness. No, it was a point-and-shoot, squeeze-the-trigger, check-and-mate activity. Regret wouldn’t stay with you, it stays with the gun.
Around me, striped outfits dragged themselves across the broken earth. In a way, they were living in a glass world. Shards of it swirling through the air, glass crunching under their feet. Even they were broken, shattered. Just one bullet could ruin their tiny, shattered world.
I felt suddenly so powerful, capable of anything. Like someone had turned off the all lights and I still had my hand on the switch.
I could make them see the light…
Just before me, a man collapsed. I could see his face, twisted in pain, and could see many things from it. He was carrying a load many times his own weight: a load of family. They were already mourning his pale repose, crying around the inferno of death, a sky-high flame that spewed ash and snow. Tendrils of smoke shattered in the cold, floating down as frozen glass.
His eyes reflected one very simple truth.
I could not kill this man.
My weapon crunched against the crystal ground. Reaching down, I grabbed the hands of the pallid man, who looked up in surprise. I watched as his face twisted into and out of confusion, and then grinned. Together, we held the load of family and pain, life and regret. Walking together yet parting ways at the freezing fires of death.
There was a day when the dead stopped falling, when the threadbare stars winked out and blue replaced gray in the sky. But my one day as a Nazi would be forever etched into my mind, as much a part of me as an arm or a leg. The day I trod across the glass of the ground, and held the arctic pyre in my own hands. It was the day that I lived and died, killed and saved, remembered and forgot.
Today, Prisoner 1048 still exists, sprawled next to an unused weapon, and lost under the ashen catacombs of Nazi Germany.
The Hands that Feed
I watched as the rolling expanse of the hills spiked radically into the sky, piercing the earth with mighty tremors. Rocks crumbled under the dirtied wheels of the bus: little pieces of the Dominican Republic smashed underfoot.
“See that?” my mother asked from the seat across.
I squinted against the full shining of the sun and… there. Tiny houses were prominent in the tropical blur. Dilapidated dwellings, balanced on the treacherous slopes. Kissed by the midday glow, gleaming as forgotten stars.
“Yeah,” I said, my face pressed against the coolness of the glass. The beauty was absolutely breathtaking. Coating everything was a brilliant sheen, ruby-red in the high of noon. Gorgeous treetops and tremendous gorges sparkled in the summer sun.
The houses were a distinct beauty. Profound against the Dominican wilds, they were a refreshing breath of civilization. Made from rotting wood and rusted tin, it was fitting from a distance. The vibrant greens and sparkling reds complemented humanity’s chestnut tinge.
Something was something nagging me—realness, I decided. These houses were real, and real people live in them. But the vivid scenery made me all but forget this as I peeked through the bus window.
The Dominican Republic was a zoo exhibit, from what I could tell. An animal so abstract, words couldn’t describe it and minds couldn’t think it. Who lived in these broken homes? Who woke up to this rubious sky?
These questions burned green in the crimson of the sky.
Eventually the bus came to a lurching stop, tearing joint tracks into the dirt. A moment of instruction passed, but its meaning was deadened by our growing anticipation.
“Alright,” said Don, the man in charge. “When we get out, let’s form a group over there. One of the villagers will make a speech; just try to hold tight.” He paused, nodding thoughtfully, then continued. “His words won’t mean much to you, but it’ll be very important to them.”
Everything was much closer now, the dry ground an unwelcome reality before us. We were no longer photographers; vision was now the lesser of our crafts. We were here to help.
I came off the bus like a pirate off a plank—able to swim but unfamiliar with the waters. Gathering around the vehicle, I was filled with an uneasy trepidation. Everything felt very important, somehow. Crucial. I looked down at my hands and they were trembling slightly.
Are the hands that feed supposed to shake?
A large tree broke the earth in front of us, curdling the sun-baked ground into an ominous shade. Unseen at first, the community rested under this stain of darkness. Chestnut faces looked excitedly across each other, trying to gauge how to act through their peers. No one was worried, but many people—specifically the adults—cast careful looks upon us. It was a strong group, perhaps forty people were present. Their bronze skin was a rare gem on the emerald landscape.
When I had expected a dramatic hush, chatter filled the area. Livid conversations bubbled across the scene, eagerly replacing my anxiety with confusion.
An uncomfortable moment passed, and one of our group’s translators stepped from the crowd. Reaching a suntanned palm through the air, he found the hand of a dark-skinned figure and shook it. After exchanging a few foreign words, the dark man turned and began to speak to the crowd in heartfelt Spanish. His quick words washed over the crowd like a cleansing fire, his eyes burning with a wisdom born of tragedy. Passion and energy took his words by storm, inspiration evident on the audience’s faces. His steely resolve expressed a delicate yet unspoken thanks.
After the speech, Don regained our attention and explained our roles for handing out the food. As he looked around the group, there was a distinguishing finality about the moment. Before now, everything had seemed out of place, unrealistic. But now it finally clicked.
I knew that the mission trip was all about helping people. The “helping” bit always made sense—they made it pretty clear how we’d assist the locals. It was the “people” part that never really sunk in.
These were their lives. Real people, sheltered in those broken homes. They wouldn’t be gone tomorrow, replaced by another set of actors. Only they would be here, living out their life sentences on the scorched earth, hunger and fear hanging over their heads.
This was it—the “real world,” I guess you could call it. Constants like this are omnipresent here; where pain and suffering is eternal.
I had this image in my head. A small child was smiling up at me, his eyes glowing with a newfound hope. Lives changed in an instant with my help. They would be saved by the work of my hands, the weight of their world held easily in my palms. The future of their village balanced on my fingertips.
But this dream was broken, smashed. Unhelped, unknown, unloved by the earth around them. Burned alive by the rest of the world’s ignorance, a country-wide shadow the only proof that they ever existed.
My brother and I took camp at the front of the bus, tasked with handing out the water. Instead of bottles, the liquid came in little plastic pouches. Everyone was given food items to deliver, and we now formed a pathway around the bus. Rice and meat, water and medicine, and bags and utensils lined the vehicle, mixing the smell of exhaust with a much sweeter fragrance of hope.
Eagerly, people started to walk through the lines. Children strolled alongside their parents, clutching food packets in the way that toddlers would hold a stuffed animal. Striding protectively beside them, the adults accepted the water gracefully when they went by.
Silence held many people, their darkened glances casting terrible shadows around them. But sometimes new faces would light up, expressing thanks in excitable Spanish as they took the pouches. Person after person arose through the village’s destruction, their bright eyes finding new hope through the torrid darkness.
It was a wonderful thing that we were doing, but it didn’t seem like enough. Here, getting food was a constant struggle: a battle the villagers had to face every day. Days from now, they’d be hungry again. Misery would never leave them.
People who are poor for one day can’t be imaginary for the rest. They would be living like this even after I left, I knew, risking death upon the jagged earth. They’d always be here, long after I leave their lives. Each day we don’t come back would be a day ruined. Our ignorance would taint their impoverished minds, reminding them of the easy life. My life, mocking them from a world away.
Years later, they would still look up at the hands that feed, only this time they’d be empty hands. Hands trembling violently with ignorance and doubt. Seeking my eyes from oceans away, they would find my tainted vision. They would remember how I helped them years ago, and wonder where that person is now. Noting my satisfaction, regarding it as ignorance. My ignorance, and my innocence.
I’m sorry if I don’t have a leg to stand on, I thought.
Sorry if I don’t have the hands to help.