I
enjoy Cracker Barrel's menu. Especially
the breakfast sampler that Bettyann and I share. And how she enjoys shopping their gift shop. She's always looking for
something to gift someone with. During one of those stops to nourish and shop, a little
booklet on a rack caught my eye entitled: " Year 1943." It sparked an ongoing
interest due to the fact that I was born that year. Well, one thing has lead to another and while
searching for a good read to gift Bettyann this Christmas. I ran across a story
that occurred in 1943. One of her enjoyment reading tends is anthing having to do with history; mostly by woman
authors. This story is of two hundred and
thirty women who were arrested as members of the French Resistance and sent to
Birkenau. Only 49 survived, and this in itself is remarkable but these women were
as diverse a group as could be imagined. They were Jews and Christians,
aristocrats and working class, young and old. Yet they were united by their
commitment to the French Resistance and to one another. The author, Caroline Moorhead, in her book, A Train In Winter reconstructs this true story
of these women through the journals and memoirs of survivors. Noting the mutual
dependence that made the difference between living and dying, Moorhead
highlights how the solidarity of these women to one another and to their mutual
survival sustained them through unspeakable horror and torture.
My father was one of those American servicemen who served at the end of Wold War Two, Wood Choppers Division, under Eisenhower. Dad was involved in the liberation of one site of a concentration camp. His reciting to me of his first hand experience and collaborated by many accounts of Holocaust survivors, telling of how the hellish conditions of extreme
deprivation and torture drove many to hoard whatever meager resources they
could save for themselves. Dad recounted one particular incident numerous times of the man of about 70 pounds who's hands were gripping a tin cup, for days, that he would not put down. How he held it constantly. Even when lying down. The man insisted any food, even a candy bar be placed in the filthy, stenchful cup, pressing it to his fully opened mouth, all the while, with deep, darkened, suspectful eyes, darting about as if someone was going to intrude upon his sustenance. Dad would always conculde his story with a tear, by asking, "And how could he be blame or mocked?"
Survival became the only goal—no matter what the cost, even to others. Yet, in
most of the cases with these French women in Birkenau, their solidarity toward
each other trumped the selfishness that engulfed so many others. As Moorhead
writes, "Knowing that the fate of
each depended on the others...egotism seemed to vanish and that, stripped back
to the bare edge of survival, each rose to behavior few would have believed
themselves capable of." Moorhead recounts that when unrelieved thirst
threatened to engulf one of their members in utter madness, the women pooled
together their own meager rations to get her a whole bucket of water.
I suppose that it's because my world is so very small, but I don't see this magniture of selflessness very often. It seems that, most of
the time, putting my own needs first is as natural as breathing, and just as
unconscious. Yet when faced with adversity, I notice something within me coaxing out the best and the most beautiful, I could ever imagine. Is this the Spirit stirring my soul? Why does it happen, mostly, when I'm troubled? I digress. Yet something I think worthy of looking into.
Then I read in the ancient biblical account of Ruth. Three women are left
widows, and one, Naomi, has lost her sons as well. Bereft of their economic and
financial support, the women instinctively stay together even as Naomi insists
they return to their homeland of Moab, where the prospect of finding a husband
would be more likely. But the women insist on staying. "No, we will surely return with you to your people."
Do I miss this significance of this solidarity? When I dig into the story I
discover that by staying with Naomi, the women forfeited any sense of security.
In the ancient Near East, husbands and sons secured a woman's total wellbeing.
Without husband or male heir, women were left to fend for themselves, often
forced into prostitution to earn a living. They would not only depend on one
another, but would be cast upon the mercy of another land and another people as
strangers.
Naomi understands the risks. It seems to me that she actually mourns for them
when she cries out, "Return, my daughters! Go, for I am too old to have a husband. If I
said I have hope if I should even have a husband tonight and also bear sons,
would you therefore wait until they were grown? Would you therefore refrain
from marrying? No, my daughters; for it
is harder for me than for you, for the hand of the Lord has gone forth against
me." One daughter in law, Orpah, finally relents,
and after weeping with Ruth and Naomi, returns to her homeland of Moab. But
Ruth will not leave. "Do not urge me to leave you or turn back
from following you; for where you go, I will go, and where you lodge, I will
lodge. Your people shall be my people and your God, my God." Ruth aligns herself with Naomi—her welfare is Ruth's welfare—no matter
what the cost.
My soul rejoices this morning to know that Ruth wouldn't ever see how this
exceptional act of solidarity would save—not only Naomi—but the people of
Israel. In this life, she didn't know that she became the great, great
grandmother of King David. Indeed, One
would come from David who would also demonstrate solidarity with humanity. So
great was His
act of unselfish sacrifice that He
would "empty Himself,
taking the form of a servant, and being made in the likeness of men." This
One, as
Philippians 2:5-8 tells me "humbled himself by
becoming obedient to death, even death on a cross."
Father, God, thank You for this Advent season. A special season when I have a
special opportunity of focusing on celebrating You the One of infinite solidarity.
Thank You for exposing my memory of Dad's accounts of his experiences, and the women of the French Resistance which provides me with
a contemporary example model of what Ruth demonstrated in ages past; an
altruistic solidarity to one another in order to ensure survival. Father, guide
me in not missing an opportunity, during the Advent season, in providing
a solidarity with the less fortunate. Counting it all joy! Just as You chose, through Jesus, to cast the lot with
humanity by becoming one of us, walking among us, even sharing the horror of
human death with us. Counting it all joy! For You so loved the world that You gave Your only Son...solidarity
in order to bring us eternal life. Amen
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