POETRY ON THE SHOAH






ANNA SWIRSZCZYNSKA

THE GHETTO: A MOTHER

Cuddling in the arms her half-asphyxiated baby, howling,
she ran up the staircase of the apartment building that was set ablaze.
From the first floor to the second.
From the second to the third.
From the third to the fourth.

Until she had jumped onto the roof.
There, having choked with air, clinging to the chimney,
she looked down from where she could hear
the crackle of flames which were reaching higher and higher.

And then she became motionless and silent.
She kept silent to the end, till the moment
at which she suddenly clenched her eyelids,
stepped to the roof edge and, throwing forward her arms,
she dropped her baby down.

Two seconds earlier than she herself leapt down.


(Translated from Polish by Andrew Kobos)



Anna Swirszczynska (1909-1984) was an outstanding Polish poet playwright. Until 1944 she lived in Warsaw where she witnessed the Ghetto Uprising in 1943 and was a nurse in a makeshift hospital during the Warsaw Uprising in 1944. From 1945 she lived in Krakow.




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Last update: May 28, 1999

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