Auschwitz Testimonies
1945–1986
Primo Levi
with Leonardo De Benedetti
Edited by Fabio Levi and Domenico Scarpa
Introduction by Robert S.C. Gordon
Translated by Judith Woolf
polity
Levi—Auschwitz Testimonies
I
First published in Italian as Cosí fu Auschwitz. Testimonianze 1945–1986
© Giulio Einaudi editore s.p.a., Turin, 2015
This English edition © Polity Press, 2017
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ISBN-13: 978-1-5095-1336-9
ISBN-13: 978-1-5095-1337-6 (paperback)
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Levi, Primo, author. | Benedetti, Leonardo de, author.
Title: Auschwitz testimonies, 1945–1986 / Primo Levi, Leonardo de Benedetti.
Other titles: Rapporto sull’organizzazione igienico-sanitaria del campo di
concentramento per ebrei di Monowitz (Auschwitz, Alta Silesia). English
Description: Cambridge, UK : Polity Press, [2017] | Includes bibliographical
references and index.
Identifiers: LCCN 2017010122 (print) | LCCN 2017010642 (ebook) |
ISBN 9781509513369 (hardback) | ISBN 9781509513376 (pbk.) |
ISBN 9781509513390 (Mobi) | ISBN 9781509513406 (Epub)
Subjects: LCSH: Auschwitz (Concentration camp)–Sanitation. | Monowitz
(Concentration camp)–Sanitation. | Concentration camp inmates–Health
and hygiene–Poland–Oświęcim.
Classification: LCC D805.5.A96 L4713 2017 (print) | LCC D805.5.A96
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Levi—Auschwitz Testimonies
Introduction: Bare Witness
Robert S. C. Gordon
Primo Levi’s work has become something of a touchstone of
Holocaust writing and of the moral authority of the survivor
to give voice to the very worst sufferings of the twentieth
century. In 1944–5, Levi spent almost a year battling against
the humiliations and deprivations of a prisoner’s half-life
in Auschwitz – specifically Auschwitz-III, the concentration
and labour camp near Monowitz [Monowice] – and nearly
another year, following his miraculous survival and liberation, on a tortuous, stop–start journey home from Poland to
Turin. His writings first emerged, locally, almost invisibly, in
Turin in 1947, starting with the small-scale publication of If
This is a Man, a pellucid exploration of the human body and
the human mind as it adapted to life, or rather non-life, at
Auschwitz. His profile and authority grew a little in the 1950s
and 1960s, including glimmerings of an international presence, following the republication of that first book and the
appearance of its sister volume, The Truce (1963), the story
of his meandering return across the wastelands of post-war
central Europe. He continued to write, publish, speak, and
all the while work at his daytime profession as an industrial
chemist. In a quite unique and unclassifiable book, The Periodic Table (1975), he brought to the page a fizzing chronicle
of his life in/through chemistry, overshadowed only occasionally by memories of Fascism, anti-Semitism and genocide. The
Levi—Auschwitz Testimonies
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Auschwitz Testimonies
1980s brought a step-change in his international reputation,
with bestselling translations and lionization in the Englishspeaking world, crowned by the publication of his final book
of essays on the Holocaust and its moral and historical legacy
forty years on, The Drowned and the Saved (1986). His death
in 1987, almost certainly by suicide, prompted genuine and
widespread grief at the loss of such a voice, such a companion
in dialogue, such testimony.1
Levi himself was one of the first and most eloquent writers
to embrace the terminology of testimony. It is there, for
example, in one of the most powerful passages of If This is
a Man (of the 1958 second edition, that is: the passage is
not in the 1947 edition):2 in the very early days after Levi’s
arrival in Auschwitz, Steinlauf, a former officer of the AustroHungarian army and now a filthy shell of a man mired in
Auschwitz, teaches Levi his first lesson in the persistence of
human dignity:
It grieves me now that I have forgotten his plain, clear words,
the words of ex-Sergeant of the Austro-Hungarian Army, Iron
Cross in the 1914–1918 war. It grieves me because it means
that I have to translate his uncertain words and his quiet
speech, the speech of a good soldier into my language of an
incredulous man. But this was the sense, not forgotten 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.
(If This is a Man, in Complete Works of Primo Levi, p. 37)
1
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Levi’s remarkable reputation in the English-speaking world has
continued to grow in the three decades since his death, sealed by the
recent publication of a major, complete, re-edited and re-translated
edition of his oeuvre in English, a unique accolade for an Italian
writer: see The Complete Works of Primo Levi, ed. Ann Goldstein,
3 vols. (New York: Liveright, 2015).
2
The latest edition of Levi’s works in Italian includes full versions
of both the standard 1958 edition of If This is a Man and the previously untraceable 1947 edition (Opere complete di Primo Levi,
ed. Marco Belpoliti, 2 vols (Turin: Einaudi, 2016), pp. 3–133 (1947
edition), pp. 135–277 (1958 edition).
Levi—Auschwitz Testimonies
Introduction: Bare Witness
3
That other great Holocaust survivor-writer Elie Wiesel,
perhaps the only one able to keep Levi’s company in terms of
the moral force and clarity of their work, eloquently captured
the specific power of this vocation for testimony, as a vessel
for containing in words the scale and the inhuman extremes
of the Shoah: ‘if the Greeks invented tragedy, the Romans
the epistle and the Renaissance the sonnet, our generation
invented a new literature, that of testimony’.3 As Wiesel’s
formulation suggests, this new literature of ‘testimony’ – the
writing of and out of suffering, from the bare body of the
victim at the edge of death, to the essentially human act of
voicing, of stating that ‘this happened’ (as Levi’s poem at the
start of If This is a Man baldly puts it) – has hidden depths.
It has the force, complexity and depth of literature, of the
profoundest forms of expression that the civilization of the
word has invented, even if the terminology of testimony
suggests the legalistically mute courtroom witness (one who
must neither comment nor elaborate, who is a camera lens,
a microphone, a vessel more than a voice). Levi’s published
work taken as a whole – much like Wiesel’s, although in
profoundly different ways – shows him constantly striving
to go beyond bare witnessing, inventing multiple, complex
dynamics for testimony, rich hybrids of neutral record and
literary elaboration, in a searching, attentive, balanced style
that is yet acutely attuned to fracture, hesitation and muted
confusion. Levi’s testimony is a fluid, sophisticated layering
of truths, from fact to reflection, from court deposition to
writerly composition.
There are risks as well as rewards in navigating this path,
however, since it is also a path between fact and the tools
of fiction. In recent critical debate on Levi’s work, there has
been a fascinating discussion of one telling case in point, the
chapter of The Periodic Table called ‘Vanadium’, in which
Levi recounts his chance contact in the 1960s with one of the
German chemists who had briefly been his supervisor in the
factory laboratory where Levi had been assigned as a slave
labourer for a few weeks at Monowitz. This German, called
3
Elie Wiesel, ‘The Holocaust as Literary Inspiration’, in Dimensions of the Holocaust (Evanston, Ill.: The University, 1977),
pp. 4–19 (p. 19).
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Auschwitz Testimonies
Müller in the story, had on occasion acted kindly towards
him in the camp; but he was a German, on the other side, part
of the system of persecution at Auschwitz, part of the Nazi
state, a bystander actively complicit with genocide. He was,
in other words, deep within what Levi would later call ‘the
grey zone’. In ‘Vanadium’, Levi and Müller correspond; Levi
is hesitant, unsure, unwilling to offer the impossible absolution that Müller seems to want from him, and troubled by the
unsettling effect that this encounter has had on him. Before
they can meet, Müller dies, suddenly, a difficult dialogue is
cut short, perhaps necessarily. Biographers and critics have
since discovered that ‘Vanadium’ is a remarkable mix of fact
and narrative reshaping: Müller’s real name was Ferdinand
Meyer, and Levi had asked a friend and intermediary to
trace him, and several other figures he remembered from the
camps, rather than stumbling across him by chance, spotting
a misspelled word that triggers a flash of memory; and the
two had spoken and possibly even met before Meyer’s death.
In other words, Levi reshaped the episode ten years on for
The Periodic Table, in an effort to express adequately the
tense legacies and complex truths of complicity and individual humanity in the ‘grey’ figure of the bystander.4
Testimony, then, at least in the hands of a writer of Levi’s
subtlety, is best thought of as malleable and fluid in form,
and as one all the more profoundly engaged with truths
historical, moral and imaginative for that. If it is practised
and applied too narrowly, it risks becoming a straitjacket, as
if the survivor were being told not to try out new ways of
seeing, new ways of voicing, to stick to what s/he saw and
heard, courtroom-style. In this sense, Levi’s essays, his newspaper columns, his poems, his anthologies, his translations,
his science-fiction and fantasy, his novels and stories of work,
resistance and science – his entire eclectic body of work,
whatever its many other virtues and qualities, can be said
4
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For ‘Vanadium’, see Levi’s biographers Carole Angier, The Double
Bond. Primo Levi: A Biography (London: Viking, Penguin, 2002),
pp. 579–83; Ian Thomson’s Primo Levi (London: Hutchinson,
2002), pp. 305–10, 250–2; and Marco Belpoliti, ‘Vanadio e il grigio
dottor Müller’, in Primo Levi di fronte e di profilo (Parma: Guanda,
2015), pp. 261–73; Martina Mengoni, Primo Levi e i tedeschi /
Primo Levi and the Germans (Turin: Einaudi, 2017).
Levi—Auschwitz Testimonies
Introduction: Bare Witness
5
also to express this mode of flexible testimony: the on-going
elaboration of a reflection on the fact that ‘this happened’.
Perhaps more than any other survivor-writer, Levi’s practice
of testimony was capacious, stretching the definition and the
boundaries of Wiesel’s grim twentieth-century invention.
Which brings us to this remarkable collection of fragments, Auschwitz Testimonies: 1945–1986, painstakingly
compiled and edited by Fabio Levi and Domenico Scarpa
of the Centro Primo Levi in Turin. Auschwitz Testimonies
is not a new book by Primo Levi as such, certainly not one
of those often unsatisfactory posthumous fragments of an
incomplete work.5 Nor is it a mere miscellany of occasional
articles, however.6 This is because it has a powerful coherence as a collection and the editors have a powerful point to
make with it: that beneath the surface of Levi’s extraordinary
creative testimony carried out across his published oeuvre –
his lifelong work of observation, truth-telling and reflective,
imaginative elaboration – there lies another layer of testimony, a hidden seam in the work of witness, sustained just
like the layer above it across the four long decades of Levi’s
post-war career, indeed integral to it.
Auschwitz Testimonies contains around two dozen short
documents by Primo Levi, accompanied by a handful written
by or with his older friend and fellow Auschwitz survivor,
Leonardo De Benedetti, all fragments of the most direct, raw
attempts at setting the record or setting it straight. These
documents – some familiar, others entirely new, unpublished
or long forgotten, recovered by the editors from obscure
archives, journals and catalogues – are in many respects
typical of the detritus of words left behind by the past, only
5
Readers of Levi’s biographies will know that there exists an incomplete manuscript of a final work by Levi, provisionally entitled
‘The Double Bond’ (‘Il doppio legame’), conceived as a companion volume to The Periodic Table. To date, there is no sign that
this unfinished work will be published (Angier, Double Bond, pp.
672–86; Thomson, Primo Levi, pp. 351–7).
6
See, e.g., Primo Levi, Black Hole of Auschwitz (Cambridge: Polity,
2003), a selection of those ‘Occasional Writings’, including versions of four of the short pieces included in Auschwitz Testimonies, although with certain variations. A near-exhaustive section of
uncollected writings is included in Complete Works.
Levi—Auschwitz Testimonies
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Auschwitz Testimonies
a fraction of which are destined to survive, ready for rediscovery by diligent future historians. There is a professional
technical report, an exchange of letters, signed statements and
legal questionnaires, lists, notes, brief occasional articles. This
is Levi (and De Benedetti) busy at a low-level, behind-thescenes, quiet and sporadic labour: a sort of minimal or bare
witnessing, all but unelaborated, in contrast to the complex
elaborations of the published work, but neither reductive nor
restrictive for that.
Many of the pieces are partial, provisional, often marked by
uncertainty and even error – a good example is the distorted
figure, originating in Soviet documents that circulated for
many years after the war, of 4 million victims at Auschwitz,
which is used here by Levi (e.g. in ‘This Was Auschwitz’; or
5 million in ‘Political Deportees’; 3.5 million in ‘That Train
to Auschwitz’). Later research has corrected this number to
only (only!) just over 1 million, of the 6 million Jewish victims
of genocide all told. Even in their personal recollections, Levi
and De Benedetti contradict themselves and each other on
minor details, such as over the exact number on their deportation trucks or the ages of the oldest and youngest victims on
the convoy. Were a historian to come upon these fragments in
their research, they would no doubt look for corroboration
and correction from dozens of other sources; perhaps, were
their author’s name not one so well known and admired, they
would be set to one side, to disappear once more into the
vast war archive. But we do not need to read these traces of
the past and of the work of testimony they enact quite like
professional historians. There are other truths, other kinds of
human and humanizing effort at stake here.
The book’s mosaic of documents reflects different moments
in Levi’s career as a public and private witness, as a researcher
and writer, and the form they take reflects the different kinds
of requests and contexts that produced them. Several are
interestingly strained or constrained by their form (and the
slips and gaps are one symptom of this): we should not go
looking for the powerful rhetoric and equipoise of Levi’s
books here. On the contrary, the strain is a marker of the
distinctive value these pieces hold: their struggle to get clear
facts and essential truths down on paper, unadorned, their
quiet work of transmission.
Levi—Auschwitz Testimonies
Introduction: Bare Witness
7
We can identify five loose types of document in these Auschwitz Testimonies. The first and longest entry in the book
also gives us possibly the most surprising type of the five: this
is a 1946 medical and hygienic report on the sanitary conditions at Monowitz, a document that Levi drafted together
with De Benedetti – in all probability, in fact, De Benedetti
took the lead here, as he was a professional physician – while
they were both in a Soviet holding camp at Kattowitz [Katowice], following liberation from Auschwitz in early 1945.7
The Soviets asked many Auschwitz survivors, and especially
doctors, to set down on record their observations as they
prepared their own state report on Nazi atrocities. On their
return home to Turin, De Benedetti and Levi refined it and
submitted it to a local professional medical journal, Minerva
medica, where it was published in late 1946 with all its dry
detail of pathologies, nutrition, patent medications and treatments in the camp, in particular in its awful clinic (later the
subject of a potent chapter in If This is a Man, ‘Ka Be’), in
reality more an entry-point to the gas chambers than a place
of care or cure.
Like the medical report, the second type of bare witnessing
sampled here also has its origins immediately in the ferment
of the weeks and months following Levi’s return. Writing,
talking, thinking and pushing in many directions as he struggled to come to terms with what he had experienced, Levi
was variously drafting chapters of If This is a Man, writing
poems, strange fictions, war tales and Auschwitz memories,
as well as starting a career, meeting his future wife, working
on the medical report with De Benedetti, and looking to
help discover which of his many companions survived and
which did not, amongst all those whose paths he had crossed
since he had taken refuge in the Alps in late 1943. A cluster
of documents in Auschwitz Testimonies – the briefest but
also in some ways the most talismanic and moving of them
all – see Levi leaving traces of these people in the archive.
7
The report was rediscovered by critic Alberto Cavaglion and published in Italian in 1993, and a first English edition appeared as
Auschwitz Report (London: Verso, 2006). The version published
here has been revised following the corrected edition first published
in Italian in 2013.
Levi—Auschwitz Testimonies
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Auschwitz Testimonies
Especially pregnant are the bare lists, one present here also in
facsimile image, where Levi transcribes and recovers as many
names as he can from the maelstrom. From 1945, there is a
report listing the names he can recall of those evacuated from
Monowitz on the Nazi death marches as the Soviets closed in;
from 1971, there is another list, of seventy-six names: those
who were with him on his first entry into Monowitz. (The
several hundred others who had reached Auschwitz on the
same train as Levi and De Benedetti were, of course, gassed
immediately on arrival.) Levi annotates his list, with precision and hideous, necessary clarity: letter codes, symbols and
boxes stand for different nationalities and categories: those
who died of illness, those in selections for the gas chambers,
those deported elsewhere, the few (fourteen) who survived.8
These lists have a bare power in their own right, but
from as early as 1945 and throughout the post-war decades,
such information-gathering was also pursued with a specific
further purpose in mind: prosecution of Nazi perpetrators.
Trial documents are the third and most numerous type on
display in Auschwitz Testimonies, also the type where De
Benedetti stands most consistently steadily alongside Levi, the
two giving evidence for the same trials, on occasion travelling abroad to provide depositions, but more often drafting
clipped, short documents in Italy for prosecutors’ files. Here,
the two are literal witnesses, deposed for the prosecution. In
1946–7, for example, both provide generic statements for
Italian-Jewish research authorities on their experience of and
conditions in Monowitz, drawing on their medical report and
on their lists. They also draft declarations for the trial of Auschwitz camp commandant Rudolf Höss, tried and executed
in Poland in 1947. In 1959–60, De Benedetti documents his
knowledge of his fellow doctor and infamous torturer Joseph
Mengele, as part of failed West German efforts at extradition and prosecution. Around the same time, Levi provides
a deposition for the Jerusalem trial of the prime bureaucrat
and architect of the Final Solution, Adolf Eichmann. (Levi
also writes a powerful article on Eichmann for a cultural
8
I
Levi refers to the list as an attachment in his ‘Deposition for the
Bosshammer Trial’. Further lists of names are included in Levi’s
‘Deposition for the Eichmann Trial’ and both Levi’s and De Benedetti’s ‘Questionnaire for the Bosshammer Trial’.
Levi—Auschwitz Testimonies
Introduction: Bare Witness
9
journal, included here as ‘Testimony for Eichmann’, and a
devastating poem, ‘For Adolf Eichmann’: Complete Works
of Primo Levi, p. 1906). Both friends, finally, contribute in
the 1960s and again the early 1970s, to the long process of
evidence-gathering leading to the war-crimes prosecution of
Friedrich Bosshammer, Eichmann’s lieutenant and operator
of the Final Solution in Italy. Bosshammer was sentenced to
life imprisonment in 1972, for the murder of more than 3,000
Italian Jews, on the basis of research coordinated by West
German prosecutors and CDEC, a Milanese Jewish research
centre, who gathered Levi and De Benedetti’s evidence –
declarations, questionnaires and depositions – alongside that
of many others. Bosshammer died only a few months later,
before the final verdict was confirmed.
The last two forms of bare witnessing sampled here draw
on Levi’s public occasional writings and press articles (e.g. for
the Turin national daily La Stampa, for a Jewish community
magazine Ha Keillah, and for anti-Fascist or campaigning
journals). These are perhaps more familiar kinds of writing
– these or comparable pieces have been anthologized before
in Black Hole of Auschwitz and elsewhere. They belong to
the more civic and public role Levi increasingly took on
over the last twenty to thirty years of his life, as he became
the single most prominent and powerful Holocaust voice in
Italy (and in due course internationally also). These strands
find a starting-point as far back as 1955, however, in a piece
called ‘Anniversary’, a short article but a watershed in this
trajectory from private to public. In it, Levi uses the tenth
anniversary of Italy’s liberation and the end of the war to
lay down several lines of future Holocaust memory, lamenting the silence that surrounds the genocide and calling for
renewed, honest attention to all its horrors (honest because
Levi writes here, perhaps for the first time, about the shame of
the camps, the degradations and complicities they forced on
their victims, later one of the great themes of The Drowned
and the Saved). Further anniversary pieces follow from 1960
and again 1975. The 1960 article (published 1961) draws on
Levi’s contribution to one of several major cycles of public
lectures and talks, on Fascism and the war, that took place in
Italian cities to mark the fifteenth anniversary of 1945, and
coincided with events to commemorate the centenary of Italy’s
modern nationhood and, indeed, with a recent flowering of
Levi—Auschwitz Testimonies
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Auschwitz Testimonies
neo-Fascism in Italy. (This talk, given in Bologna, was one of
the rare occasions when Levi shared a public platform with
the other great Italian-Jewish writer and chronicler of Fascist
anti-Semitism, Giorgio Bassani.)
From the late 1950s and for the following decades, another
crucial strand of civic engagement with Holocaust memorialization opened up for Levi: Holocaust exhibitions and monuments. Auschwitz Testimonies gives us three examples of such
sites and Levi’s contributions and responses: in Turin in 1959,
a travelling exhibition on deportation of anti-Fascists, Jews
and other victims from Italy to the concentration camps produced a remarkable outpouring of interest, especially among
the younger generations, which touched Levi deeply. He calls
it here the ‘Miracle in Turin’ in one article and publishes a
fascinating exchange of letters with a young girl who signs
herself, ‘A Fascist’s daughter who wants to know the truth’,
which allows him to address the confusions of the young
and Italy’s failure to reflect on its long, generational complicity with Fascism. (The final piece published here, ‘To Our
Generation . . . ’, shows this generational perspective stayed
with Levi until the end.) The letters bring out a pedagogical
impulse in Levi’s voice, one carried through to his contributions to Italian Holocaust museums and memorials. In
1973, he pens a piece (‘The Europe of the Lagers’) for a new
national Museum of Deportation, displaying objects from the
camps, letters from victims executed by Nazis, and artworks
by Picasso, Léger, Guttuso and others, which opened in the
small central-northern town of Carpi, near Bologna. A few
miles from Carpi stood Fossoli, the largest detention and
pre-deportation camp in Italy, where Levi and Leonardo were
held by Italian Fascists and German SS before transportation
to Auschwitz. Fossoli is named in the very first line of the
1947 edition of If This is a Man (the 1958 edition added a
page on Levi’s time as an anti-Fascist partisan prior to his
arrest) and is the site of excruciating scenes of premonition:
I
Night came, and it was such a night one knew that human eyes
would not witness it and survive . . . All took leave of life in the
manner that most suited them. Some prayed, some drank to
excess, others became intoxicated by a final unseemly lust. But
mothers stayed up to prepare food for the journey with tender
care, and washed their children and packed the luggage; and
Levi—Auschwitz Testimonies
Introduction: Bare Witness
11
at dawn the barbed wire was full of children’s washing hung
out to dry in the wind. Nor did they forget the diapers, the
toys, the pillows, and the hundred other small things that
mothers remember and children always need. Would you not
do the same? If you and your child were going to be killed
tomorrow, would you not feed him today?
(Complete Works of Primo Levi, p. 11)
The same collection of artists, survivor groups and civic
officials that worked on the Carpi museum also worked on
the project for an Italian national memorial and monument at
Auschwitz itself, which opened in 1980. Here too, Levi lent
his voice, and we can read it in the form of a draft notice
here, ‘Draft of a Text for the Interior of the Italian Block at
Auschwitz’: a quite formal (once again, strained) piece of
pedagogical writing that synthesizes an arc of history that
led from Fascist thugs burning buildings in Italy in 1919–20
to Nazis burning books and then people in 1930s and 1940s
Germany and Europe.
Levi’s achievements as a writer-witness and as a writer
(which are not quite the same thing) would not have been
possible without his below-the-radar activity of bare witnessing. But these pieces show us more than just a laboratory source of a great writer’s oeuvre (and to have shown
this is a signal achievement of Fabio Levi and Domenico
Scarpa’s work of excavation, editing and commentary). They
speak also to a larger enterprise and to something beyond
the individual voice. They are minimal moments of a largescale collective effort at remembering and recording carried
out over decades, by individual survivors, families, groups
and associations (Levi mentions more than once ANED, an
Italian association of ex-deportees to which he dedicated
much time and effort), by communities and indeed entire
generations. They constantly practise or lean towards forms
of contact and transmission, of both facts and awareness,
and in this they express a constant facet of Levi, an ethical
tension towards others, towards dialogue and attention. For
this reason, it is powerfully apt that Auschwitz Testimonies is
not in fact authored by one single writer, Primo Levi – even
one now rightly canonized as a great voice of twentiethcentury history and literature. It is rather a shared enterprise,
by Primo Levi and Leonardo De Benedetti, fellow victims
Levi—Auschwitz Testimonies
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and fellow witnesses, companions in suffering and indeed
friends – as is movingly evident in Primo’s commemoration
of Leonardo on his death in 1983, ‘In Memory of a Good
Man’, another act of witness, and as had already been powerfully clear as they finally, nervously, together crossed the
border back into Italy in Autumn 1945, witnesses to a shared,
fragile rebirth:
I
After dark we passed the Brenner, which we had crossed
into exile twenty months before – our less tested comrades
in cheerful tumult, Leonardo and I in a silence charged with
memory. Of six hundred and fifty, the number who had left,
three of us were returning. And what had we lost, in those
twenty months? What should we find at home? How much
of ourselves had been eroded, extinguished? Did we return
richer or poorer, stronger or weaker? We did not know; but
we knew that on the thresholds of our homes, for good or
ill, a trial awaited us, and we anticipated it with fear. Flowing
through our veins, with the weary blood, we felt the poison
of Auschwitz. Where would we draw the strength to resume
living, to knock down the barriers, the hedges that grow up
on their own during all absences, around every abandoned
house, every empty den? Soon, even tomorrow, we would
have to join battle, against still unknown enemies, within and
outside us. With what weapons, what energy, what will? We
felt old with the weight of centuries . . .
(The Truce, in Complete Works of Primo Levi,
p. 396, adapted)
Levi—Auschwitz Testimonies