|
Growing up took place very quickly during the
Holocaust. Girls who we would consider very young in terms of age functioned as
adult women. The transition sometimes took place within a few days if not hours.
From innocence and sheltered childhood in the bosoms of loving families, they
were exposed to ghastly violence, severe physical assault, and horrific
spectacles of humiliation-of themselves or of those close to them. These girls
were often forced to take responsibility for their fate and that of their
parents, younger siblings, and others. In many cases parents ceased to function
or to be breadwinners. Some girls were sent unaccompanied to places of hiding or
refuge. Others remained alone or with younger siblings after their parents had
been murdered. They developed survival mechanisms and took their fate in their
hands.
Nevertheless, many retained parts of their personalities as young girls in every
respect - girls who yearned for a friend who would support them and to whom they
could give of themselves. They played together, dreamed about an optimistic
future, and experienced first love. They derived strength from memories of home,
friends, and the very fact of discovering inner strengths of which they had been
unaware. Some of their writings and memoirs indicate that these girls, due to
their bond with other girls, regarded at least some parts of this dark era as
positive experiences despite the grimness that enveloped them.
By the time they were ghettoized, many young women had already assumed social
responsibility by enlisting in underground or social activity, usually via youth
movements or similar entities to which they belonged. These activities include
diverse large-scale actions such as forwarding information and secret material,
actual warfare, care of children as social counselors, and care of the elderly
in a variety of social-service mechanisms.
Adult women also needed friends—in the ghetto if they had survived without
spouses, in gender-segregated labor camps, or upon the loss of the family that
had been their source of strength and support. Usually the connection was with a
sole friend but group companionships often occurred as well.
Group companionship in the Holocaust was a phenomenon unique to women. As stated
by the historian Judith Baumel־Schwartz it was advantageous to stay “invisible”
at this time; a network of friends was some thing that attracted attention.
Grouping, however, provided an advantage in terms of the possibilities of
support and survival that it facilitated. Small groups, composed of a couple or
threesome of friends, relatives, or older women, came together to form large
groups that protected a girl or girls younger than them.
Judith Tydor Baumel, Double Jeopardy: Gender and the Holocaust, London: Vallentine Mitchell, 1998. |