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Chabad.org » Learning & Values » Jewish History » Essays & Stories on the Holocaust » The Nazi Accomplice in the Circumcision
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The Nazi Accomplice in the Circumcision


Each morning at dawn, the Germans would lead us out of the camp for a day of hard labor that ended only at nightfall. Each pair of workers was given a huge saw and expected to cut its quota of logs. Because of the horrendous conditions in the camp and the starvation rations on which we were supposed to subsist, most of us could barely stand on our feet. But we sawed away, knowing that our lives depended upon it; anyone collapsing on the job or failing to meet his daily quota was killed on the spot, G-d forbid.

One day, as I pulled and pushed the heavy saw with my partner, I was approached by a young woman from our work detail. The pallor of her face showed her to be in an extremely weak physical state. "Rebbe," she whispered to me, "do you have a knife?"

I immediately understood her intention and felt the great responsibility that rested upon me. "My daughter," I begged, concentrating all the love and conviction in my heart in the effort to dissuade her from her intended deed. "Do not take your own life. I know that your life is now a living hell, from which death seems a blessed release. But we must never lose hope. With G-d's help, we will survive this ordeal and see better days."

But the woman seemed oblivious to my words. "A knife," she repeated. "I must have a knife. Now. Before it is too late."

At that moment, one of the German guards noticed our whispered conversation and approached us. "What did she say to you?" He demanded of me.

We both froze. Conversing during work was a grave transgression. Many a camp inmate had been shot on the spot for far lesser crimes.

The woman was first to recover. "I asked him for a knife," she said. To my horror, she then addressed her request to the guard: "Give me a knife!"

The German, too, guessed her intention, and a devilish smile flickered on his lips. Doubtless he had seen the bodies of those who, out of desperation, threw themselves during the night on the electrified fence that surrounded the camp; but this would be a novel sight for him. Still smiling, he reached into his pocket and handed her a small knife.

Taking the knife, she hurried back to her work station and bent over a small bundle of rags that she had placed on a log. Quickly unraveling the bundle, she took out a tiny infant. Before our astonished eyes, she swiftly and skillfully circumcised the week-old boy.

"Blessed are You, G-d our G-d, King of the Universe," she recited in a clear voice, "Who has sanctified us with His commandments and commanded us to enter him into the covenant of Abraham our Father."

Cradling the child in her arms, she soothed his cries. Then, she addressed the heavens: "Master of the Universe! Eight days ago you gave me a child. I know that neither I nor he will long survive in this accursed place. But now, when you take him back, you will receive him as a complete Jew."

"Your knife," she said, handing the holy object back to the German. "Thank you."

This story was told by Rabbi Israel Spira, the Rebbe of Bluzhov, who witnessed it in the Janowska Concentration Camp:

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An account by Rabbi Israel Spira, the Rebbe of Bluzhov   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author
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Latest Comments:
Posted: Oct 23, 2011
The Light in cursed place
I've never read something so inspirational. When I am in bad mood I read this story again and again. Thank you and Thank G_D for let me read this story.
Posted By Ivan, Maribor, NA/Slovenia

Posted: July 19, 2011
Powerfull and Amazing
I haven't read for a long long time something so powerfull and inspirational. Is there vessel in me to be able to accept the light that is radiating from this event?
Posted By Anonymous

Posted: Jan 25, 2010
May I have her courage
I have read and reread this article, each time the result is the same; infinite pride for my sister who did what must be done to bring her son into the Covenant and tears from wondering if I could do similarly.
One of the many excuses that Hitler used for his ultimate pogrom was that we Jews introduced circumcision to the world along with a moral code that brought down paganism. Dennis Prager and Joseph in their book "Why the Jews?" quote The Reverend Edward H. Flannery of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops: "It was Judaism that brought the concept of a G-d-given universal moral law into the world...the Jew carries the burden of G-d in history [and] for this has never been forgiven.
Judaism demands responsibility, something the vast majority of the world rejects. They want someone else to blame for their sins. But who, I wonder can they blame? The Jews brought the concept of good and evil to the planet, the least Jew haters can do is lay the fault for their sins on us.
Posted By Beverly Kurtin, Hurst, TX

Posted: Jan 24, 2010
Deniers
Holocaust Deniers are simply Jew Haters, nothing less, nothing more. The Arab world might as well add denial as part and parcel of the Koran; they treat it as if it actually was. The whole reason for denial is simply this: To turn the State of Israel into a bastard country. People who formerly supported Israel wholeheartedly have viciously turned against her and by extension, the Jews of the world. Particularly noxious are the various Christian denominations who have turned their backs on Israel because they have adopted the denial stance.
The woman who chose to listen to G-d rather than break the covenant that started with Abraham. She was truly sanctified because she feared G-d more than she feared for her own life or even what the guard would do to her and her son. This story has stuck in my mind as what each of us must do in order to make G-d smile.
Posted By Beverly Kurtin, Hurst, TX

Posted: Jan 14, 2010
...the holy object...
Yes, a Nazi's knife can become a holy object... That is the power of the Jew...
Posted By chaim, sm, ca
via chabadonmontana.com

Posted: Oct 29, 2009
wow!
this is such an amazing story, i truly thought the woman would take her life, and instead she circumcised her son!!
Posted By Anonymous

Posted: Oct 26, 2009
Anger
Although I am touched deeply by this remarkable telling of this story, I am puzzled and angered by the Holocaust deniers who dare deny that the atrocities brought on by the Holocaust actually happened, especially in light that fewer than 60 years have past and photographs taken on the orders of Dwight Eisenhower are widely spread around the world.
What particularly galls me is the number of "Christians" who claim to love G-d, yet deny what happened. How can this be?
I sometimes have "survivor guilt" because I was alive during the time that my brothers and sisters were experiencing horrors I shall never know, yet why did I survive while they died?
I hope that each denier wake up to choke on their lying tongues. May I be forgiven, but there can be, IMHO, no forgiveness of deniers.
Posted By Dr. Beverly Kurtin

Posted: Oct 26, 2009
WOW
...here I sit speachless, what humanity in the face of savage brutality, how does one respond, what a twist in the story, what a blessing, what hope...
Posted By Bill Sarpas, Louisville, USA

Posted: Oct 26, 2009
Wow
This left me breathless. I hope I have this woman's courage and faith. And I pray I never have the chance to find out if it is so.
Posted By Sarah Masha, W Bloomfield, MI/USA
via baischabad.com

Posted: Oct 26, 2009
Re: "who is Rabbi Spira" comment
Rabbi Israel Spira is the highly-regarded Bluzhever Rebbe OBM, who survived the brutal Nazi concentration camps (etc.) while offering encouragement and strength to his persecuted (and worse!) brethren & sisters there. He is also the author of many of the stirring & heart-rending stories (of which this story is one) told in Yaffa Eliach's moving book "Hasidic Tales of the Holocaust" (Vintage Books NY, a Division of 'Random House').
Posted By Yossi Engel, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia



 


Essays & Stories on the Holocaust
Two Candles for Sammy
The Other Side of the Prayer Book
Holy Day
Ester'ke
"This Is My Torah Scroll"
The Blanket
A Rebbe's Confession
The Nazi Accomplice in the Circumcision
It Should Again See Light
Was the Holocaust a Punishment?
The Survivor's Prayer
For the Sake of Tefillin
One Child, Remembered
Angels of Light
A Righteous Tree
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