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The Boxer - Jurek Becker
INTRODUCTION
by Ruth Franklin
When Mordeha Bekker was reunited with his son after World War II, he recognized Jurek only by the freckles on his forehead. They had not seen each other since winter 1943-44, when Mordeha was separated from his family in the Lodz Ghetto and deported to Auschwitz. Several months later Jurek and his mother, Chana, were sent to Ravensbrück and then Sachsenhausen, where Chana died. By the time Mordeha found his son—still at Sachsenhausen, part of which had been turned into a hospital for survivors—he was a boy of seven, but in both size and intellectual development he was more like a four-year-old. As Jurek would later describe the scene in The Boxer (1975), he did not even understand the meaning of the word son.
Mordeha responded to the trauma of the war by trying to erase it. He Germanized his own name to Max Becker and his son’s to Georg. On his new East German identity card, he subtracted six years from his age—the six years he had spent in the ghetto and camps—and claimed he had been born in Bavaria. He even stopped speaking Polish to his son so that Jurek would learn German. Jurek later recalled that unfortunately he forgot Polish more quickly than he learned German, so that he felt temporarily suspended between the two languages— as he was also between two names and two countries. Communication would be a source of difficulty between them for the rest of Max’s life. The two almost never talked about their experiences during the war: Jurek always said that he could remember nothing of those years, and Max spoke of them only in a limited, formulaic way.
Jurek Becker returned to this period in The Boxer, his third novel. By that time he was already well established as a writer of both screenplays and fiction. His stunning first novel, Jacob the Liar (1969), grew from the seed of his father’s personal history. It takes place toward the end of the war, in an unnamed Polish ghetto. Called into the Gestapo office for a minor infraction, Jacob happens to overhear a report on the radio that the Russians are only about two hundred miles away. But since few make it out of that office alive, no one will believe the provenance of his news, so Jacob pretends that he heard it from his own contraband radio. (There are differing reports about whether Max actually owned a radio in the ghetto or just listened along with others, but regardless, he does seem to occasionally have had access to one.) Jacob’s lie, naturally, has unintended consequences, as soon all the ghetto inhabitants are constantly pestering him for news. He goes to increasingly greater lengths in order to sustain the fiction because he comes to believe it is necessary to maintain morale. Hope must not be allowed to fade away, otherwise they won’t survive.
The book was celebrated by critics in both East and West Germany. Becker’s biographer, Sander Gilman, has described it as the most important survivor novel written in German.
But Max Becker—who had wanted Jurek to write a more traditionally heroic story about bravery and resistance in the ghetto—did not speak to his son for a year after it appeared. Knowing this, it is hardly a surprise that Jurek waited to write The Boxer until after his father had died, in April 1972. What really tormented me were the notebooks full of questions that I had never asked him and could not have asked him,
he said later.
The Boxer tries to find a way to ask those questions. Like Jacob the Liar, it is written in the form of an interview with its protagonist, conducted by a person who remains unnamed. Here the main character is called Aron Blank, but he is obviously based on Max: the name change (Aron uses the German name Arno), the six years subtracted from his identity card, the troubled romantic relationships and alcoholism that marked Max’s later years. (Becker often called The Boxer the most autobiographical of his novels, and his widow told me that there is no doubt that the story is not only inspired by Jurek’s father but also pretty much mirrors his life in Berlin after the liberation.
) In conversations that span two years, Aron recounts at length the details of his post-wartime life, from the initial search for his son—here named Mark— through their attempt to settle down in the GDR and become good East German citizens.
Aron’s primary characteristic is his supreme detachment. He flits from one job to the next; people enter and exit his life without leaving an impression. In the end he will even let go of his son, despite Mark’s yearning for more contact with him. Their most meaningful moment of connection happens when Mark comes home from school one day after being beaten up by his classmates. Aron resolves that Mark must learn to box in order to protect himself. To inspire him, he tells his son a heroic story of how he learned to box as a child after getting into a fight with a bully. The next time the bully came for him, he was prepared: And from then on peace reigned in the street; the monster didn’t show his face again.
The monster, of course, is anti-Semitism. Despite the GDR’s attempts to reinvent itself as a new country with new citizens, the legacy of Nazism could be felt everywhere. When Aron first arrives in East Berlin, he is given an apartment belonging to a former Nazi Party member, in which he is initially so uncomfortable that he sleeps on the floor in the storage room rather than in the luxurious king-size bed. Later, visiting Mark for the first time in the convalescent home to which he has been transferred, he chooses to spend the night in the woods rather than search for a bed in the nearby village: the home is located in a former concentration camp and he fears the locals, who spent the war years in such close proximity to it. In his biography, Gilman tells a poignant story that demonstrates just how inescapable that history was. As an adult, one day Becker stopped on the Kürfurstendamm in West Berlin to buy a newspaper:
The woman behind the counter recognized him as a celebrity and said that she had known his mother and him in Ravensbrück. She asked him, did he know how his mother had died? She gave the answer herself: from starvation. But do you know why? she continued. His silence was followed by her answer: in order to feed you.
The government’s attempts to help the survivors overcome their past, such as the reparations and special privileges that Mark and his father receive, only make them feel more like outsiders. More importantly, such protections are no safeguard against the discrimination that continues to raise its ugly head: sometimes, as in the case of the schoolyard bully, only force will bring about justice. "The Boxer was about the failure of the GDR to serve its most vulnerable citizens," Gilman writes. Not surprisingly, Becker did not remain in East Germany for long after the novel’s publication. In 1977 he left for an extended stay in America. The following year he settled in West Berlin, where he remained until his death, in 1997.
The focus of The Boxer is on Aron; Mark remains largely a cipher. He surfaces as a distinct person, separate from his father’s story, only at the end, when Aron shows his interviewer a stack of letters from his son and confesses that he never answered them. In reality, it was Jurek Becker who felt tormented by the notebooks full of unasked questions remaining after his father’s death. Those notebooks appear in the prologue to The Boxer, when the interviewer presents Aron with the finished novel and asks him to read it. Aron declines. But if Max could have read this novel, he might have been gratified by his son’s portrayal. He was clearly a distant father and a troubled man; but he was also, in his finest moment, a boxer.
INTRODUCTION
by Ruth Franklin
When Mordeha Bekker was reunited with his son after World War II, he recognized Jurek only by the freckles on his forehead. They had not seen each other since winter 1943-44, when Mordeha was separated from his family in the Lodz Ghetto and deported to Auschwitz. Several months later Jurek and his mother, Chana, were sent to Ravensbrück and then Sachsenhausen, where Chana died. By the time Mordeha found his son—still at Sachsenhausen, part of which had been turned into a hospital for survivors—he was a boy of seven, but in both size and intellectual development he was more like a four-year-old. As Jurek would later describe the scene in The Boxer (1975), he did not even understand the meaning of the word son.
Mordeha responded to the trauma of the war by trying to erase it. He Germanized his own name to Max Becker and his son’s to Georg. On his new East German identity card, he subtracted six years from his age—the six years he had spent in the ghetto and camps—and claimed he had been born in Bavaria. He even stopped speaking Polish to his son so that Jurek would learn German. Jurek later recalled that unfortunately he forgot Polish more quickly than he learned German, so that he felt temporarily suspended between the two languages— as he was also between two names and two countries. Communication would be a source of difficulty between them for the rest of Max’s life. The two almost never talked about their experiences during the war: Jurek always said that he could remember nothing of those years, and Max spoke of them only in a limited, formulaic way.
Jurek Becker returned to this period in The Boxer, his third novel. By that time he was already well established as a writer of both screenplays and fiction. His stunning first novel, Jacob the Liar (1969), grew from the seed of his father’s personal history. It takes place toward the end of the war, in an unnamed Polish ghetto. Called into the Gestapo office for a minor infraction, Jacob happens to overhear a report on the radio that the Russians are only about two hundred miles away. But since few make it out of that office alive, no one will believe the provenance of his news, so Jacob pretends that he heard it from his own contraband radio. (There are differing reports about whether Max actually owned a radio in the ghetto or just listened along with others, but regardless, he does seem to occasionally have had access to one.) Jacob’s lie, naturally, has unintended consequences, as soon all the ghetto inhabitants are constantly pestering him for news. He goes to increasingly greater lengths in order to sustain the fiction because he comes to believe it is necessary to maintain morale. Hope must not be allowed to fade away, otherwise they won’t survive.
The book was celebrated by critics in both East and West Germany. Becker’s biographer, Sander Gilman, has described it as the most important survivor novel written in German.
But Max Becker—who had wanted Jurek to write a more traditionally heroic story about bravery and resistance in the ghetto—did not speak to his son for a year after it appeared. Knowing this, it is hardly a surprise that Jurek waited to write The Boxer until after his father had died, in April 1972. What really tormented me were the notebooks full of questions that I had never asked him and could not have asked him,
he said later.
The Boxer tries to find a way to ask those questions. Like Jacob the Liar, it is written in the form of an interview with its protagonist, conducted by a person who remains unnamed. Here the main character is called Aron Blank, but he is obviously based on Max: the name change (Aron uses the German name Arno), the six years subtracted from his identity card, the troubled romantic relationships and alcoholism that marked Max’s later years. (Becker often called The Boxer the most autobiographical of his novels, and his widow told me that there is no doubt that the story is not only inspired by Jurek’s father but also pretty much mirrors his life in Berlin after the liberation.
) In conversations that span two years, Aron recounts at length the details of his post-wartime life, from the initial search for his son—here named Mark— through their attempt to settle down in the GDR and become good East German citizens.
Aron’s primary characteristic is his supreme detachment. He flits from one job to the next; people enter and exit his life without leaving an impression. In the end he will even let go of his son, despite Mark’s yearning for more contact with him. Their most meaningful moment of connection happens when Mark comes home from school one day after being beaten up by his classmates. Aron resolves that Mark must learn to box in order to protect himself. To inspire him, he tells his son a heroic story of how he learned to box as a child after getting into a fight with a bully. The next time the bully came for him, he was prepared: And from then on peace reigned in the street; the monster didn’t show his face again.
The monster, of course, is anti-Semitism. Despite the GDR’s attempts to reinvent itself as a new country with new citizens, the legacy of Nazism could be felt everywhere. When Aron first arrives in East Berlin, he is given an apartment belonging to a former Nazi Party member, in which he is initially so uncomfortable that he sleeps on the floor in the storage room rather than in the luxurious king-size bed. Later, visiting Mark for the first time in the convalescent home to which he has been transferred, he chooses to spend the night in the woods rather than search for a bed in the nearby village: the home is located in a former concentration camp and he fears the locals, who spent the war years in such close proximity to it. In his biography, Gilman tells a poignant story that demonstrates just how inescapable that history was. As an adult, one day Becker stopped on the Kürfurstendamm in West Berlin to buy a newspaper:
The woman behind the counter recognized him as a celebrity and said that she had known his mother and him in Ravensbrück. She asked him, did he know how his mother had died? She gave the answer herself: from starvation. But do you know why? she continued. His silence was followed by her answer: in order to feed you.
The government’s attempts to help the survivors overcome their past, such as the reparations and special privileges that Mark and his father receive, only make them feel more like outsiders. More importantly, such protections are no safeguard against the discrimination that continues to raise its ugly head: sometimes, as in the case of the schoolyard bully, only force will bring about justice. "The Boxer was about the failure of the GDR to serve its most vulnerable citizens," Gilman writes. Not surprisingly, Becker did not remain in East Germany for long after the novel’s publication. In 1977 he left for an extended stay in America. The following year he settled in West Berlin, where he remained until his death, in 1997.
The focus of The Boxer is on Aron; Mark remains largely a cipher. He surfaces as a distinct person, separate from his father’s story, only at the end, when Aron shows his interviewer a stack of letters from his son and confesses that he never answered them. In reality, it was Jurek Becker who felt tormented by the notebooks full of unasked questions remaining after his father’s death. Those notebooks appear in the prologue to The Boxer, when the interviewer presents Aron with the finished novel and asks him to read it. Aron declines. But if Max could have read this novel, he might have been gratified by his son’s portrayal. He was clearly a distant father and a troubled man; but he was also, in his finest moment, a boxer.
THE BOXER
AFTER GIVING HIM ENOUGH TIME to suggest it on his own, I ask Aron if he wouldn’t at least like to take a quick look at it.
No, thank you,
he says.
To my following, surprised question for his reasons, he answers, he’s simply not interested. I don’t understand. After all, the story is about him. It’s his story. Although I know it’s a waste of time, I bring this fact to his attention. He smiles. He looks at the five green notebooks that lie between us on the table, eyes me skeptically, or with disapproval, or contempt — I am not good at interpreting facial expressions — in any case with no curiosity whatsoever, and says quietly, I shouldn’t have told you so much.
I think, How strange. Or isn’t it strange that he should suddenly pretend to have doubts? Now, after two years during which we spoke of nothing else, or virtually nothing else, but him? The sole purpose of our meetings was to identify Aron Blank, or at least a significant part of him. They were like open interviews, even though I wasn’t working with a tape recorder or a notepad. Nothing happened that wasn’t perfectly clear to Aron, he wasn’t tricked or pressured. On the contrary, he knew the extent to which I depended on him and his readiness to communicate, and he never gave me a particularly hard time.
It also occurs to me that he might be afraid that, since the work, as it were, is done, my sympathy will turn into indifference. There lie the five notebooks; there won’t be a sixth. Perhaps he thinks that my interest in him will fade. No further acts of kindness, because all the previous ones implied an ulterior motive, which no longer exists. And therefore it doesn’t seem altogether impossible that our separation will guide him back to the road he was on when we first began working together. Not to spare me an embarrassing retreat, in other words, not out of generosity. Rather, I suspect, to prevent any possible distress an emotional farewell might involve. Perhaps he wants to erect a barrier before I declare all trust that has grown between us to be nothing more than part of the deal, a lubricant for his memory.
However, I won’t base my attitude on hypotheses. In the end, none of my conjectures is appropriate. In the end, Aron is simply in a bad mood — among his symptoms is an overwhelming susceptibility to mood swings. I’d sooner ask why he’s not interested.
Think about it,
he says.
I had done that, I say, and, I still don’t understand.
Aron shakes his head, apparently amused, as if he can’t see how someone who professes to be intelligent can overlook such obvious motives. I’ve grown used to that attitude. He is often satisfied with hints that, combined with other gestures or with a certain way of looking at me, he thinks are informative enough. I soon learned that he found my occasional pleas for greater detail aggravating, unworthy, and foolish. So in order not to inhibit his flow of words, I would withhold my questions as often as possible, preferring to accept temporary — or for a longer stretch of time — lack of clarity, and try to fill in the ensuing gaps by deduction. But today things are different. I don’t mind insisting on explanations, we are no longer working. Today my inability to understand is, so to speak, purely personal. Nevertheless, I take pains to proceed cautiously; he mustn’t sense that anything is different than it was. I use his weapons. I tilt my head a little to one side, look at him for a long time, my questioning eyebrows raised, and my hand, which till now has been lying unnoticed on the table, is turned palm up.
This is a language Aron understands. He says reluctantly, Why don’t you leave me alone? I’m not interested. Isn’t that enough?
No,
I reply. How can that be enough? You can’t convince me that you aren’t interested in your own story.
Another couple of strokes to his outline: as soon as Aron decides to explain something, he suddenly finds it difficult to begin. He likes to use introductory phrases, tentative approaches to the subject, he often says, Listen
or All right, let’s see.
He always wants his listener to understand that the explanation implies a great effort on his part, an effort he considers unnecessary, and that he nonetheless gives in only because his listener is so stubbornly insistent. Sometimes he hints that the sentences that are to follow will require complete concentration from his listener. He might say, Pay attention.
This time, Aron says, Listen. You claim that you wrote my story, and I claim that you’re mistaken, that it’s not my story. At best, it’s something you think is my story.
What do you mean — at best?
I ask.
He says, Don’t look so hurt. I’m not blaming you. I knew it from the very first.
This said, he is now someone who has performed an uncomfortable duty. He stands up, his hands in his pockets. He walks to the window and looks at the chestnut tree that has grown so thick it blocks the view and darkens the room. A few seconds later he adds, There’s no other way.
What did you know from the very first?
I ask.
That what I tell you is one thing,
he says, and what you write is something else. Again, I’m not accusing you of anything. I understand there’s a mechanism from which you can’t defend yourself.
So, you do understand that.
Or had you meant to be perfectly satisfied only with what you heard from me?
A brainteaser that requires no answer, one of his rhetorical questions. My comprehensible no would only annoy him. As a reward for my self-restraint he goes into greater detail: of course I hadn’t meant that, I had meant something completely different. I had wanted to improve him, to make him publishable, to use him as raw material. From the beginning I had had my own ideas about a story, and then I had made choices. I had taken what I found useful and listened politely to the rest. And even what I had chosen had become different, nothing remained as it was. Why? Because we had always been interpreting — incoherently he uses the plural, confusing me. Because we had felt that damned urge to seek a hidden meaning behind everything. Because we had been suspicious of every harmless thing, as if in reality it served as a disguise for God knows what. Yes sir, says Aron, sitting down again and answering the further questions in my eyes, he had known that very well and had participated nonetheless, out of pure egoism. I mustn’t believe that it was only about me. Or did I think he was a Samaritan, who sits down and does a two-year-long favor? Of course, our conversations had been useful for him, too; of course, he had