Monday, 8 June 2026

A Small Courtesy by Héctor Hernández, Dark Roast Coffee

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Sixty-eight-year-old Gilbert Ostermann craned his neck over the steering wheel of his pickup truck, looking for street signs. His face was nearly pressed against the windshield as he crept along this unfamiliar part of the city with its confusing layout of narrow streets. ‘Where the hell is Avenue Tibbitts?’ he grumbled.

He had received a call from the cremation coordinator to come over and pick up his wife’s ashes, but somewhere along the way, he had taken a wrong turn and gotten lost. Gilbert didn’t see why he couldn’t have picked up the ashes from the funeral home where the service had been held. The woman had said something about chain-of-custody paperwork or some other such nonsense.

He rounded the corner of the next block but immediately stopped short. The shoulder belt snapped him hard in the chest. ‘Jesus! He had nearly collided with a small, sporty looking car driving on the wrong side of the road. The car had crossed over into Gilbert’s lane to make its way around a semi-trailer that was blocking the left side of the street. Workers were busy unloading large boxes.

Gilbert swore under his breath. ‘God damned moron.’ He supposed he could back up, but he was in no mood to be generous. He flicked his rough, sun-weathered hand with irritation, signaling for the other driver to back up. Nothing happened. ‘Asshole,’ Gilbert muttered.

He flashed his high beams. Still nothing. Gilbert gave the driver a fearsome glare. What the driver’s reaction was, Gilbert didn’t know. The cars entire windshield was tinted. Gilbert saw only a black void.

‘Not just an asshole,’ he growled ‘but a stubborn one to boot.’ He stabbed at his horn—two quick bursts. Still no reaction, but he did get the attention of the men unloading the boxes. They stopped to stare at Gilbert. He returned their stare with a fierce scowl. The men quickly went back to work.

Frustrated, Gilbert bore down on his horn. One, long, annoying blast.

The car’s front door swung open.


‘Uh-oh.’ Without taking his eyes off the car, Gilbert unbuckled his seatbelt and patted his waistband, reassuring himself that his pistol was still in its holster.

The driver stepped out.

Gilbert opened his door and stepped out, too. He would not be intimidated. If this fellow wanted to tango, Gilbert had an open spot on his dance card. He preferred that the other driver not do anything stupid, but if things happened to go south, he felt confident that his state’s ‘stand your ground’ law would back him up.

The driver—whether it was a man or woman was hard to say—stood motionless behind the open door of the car, only a head visible above it. The driver wore a knitted cap pulled low below the ears even though the early morning air wasn’t cold enough to bite. The driver also wore a large pair of mirrored sunglasses. The cap and glasses together hid most of their face.

Standing behind his own open door, Gilbert wrapped his fingers around the grip of his pistol and eased it out of its holster. He thumbed the safety switch. When the driver brought up some small, rectangular thing, holding it between the index finger and thumb of both hands, Gilbert tensed. It didn’t look like a gun, but that didn’t mean anything. Nowadays there were all sorts of crazy looking weapons. He blew out a breath of relief when he saw it was only a cell phone, but he was surprised when the driver pointed it at him and snapped a photo. ‘What the . . . ?’

After taking the picture, the driver got in their car, put it in reverse, and set the tires squealing. The wheels spun wildly on the asphalt and smeared the road with a heavy layer of rubber as thick as cream cheese spread on a bagel. The workers who had been unloading cargo from the semi-trailer stopped what they were doing and peeked out from behind the truck’s back end. They were met with noxious fumes and billowing smoke.

When the tires finally caught traction, the car rocketed backwards, and the surprised workers scrambled for safety. The car traveled half a block before whipping around 180 degrees and roaring forward, all in one smooth motion, something Gilbert had seen done only in the movies. The workers looked at one another, shrugged, and went back to work.

At 6:45 a.m. the following morning, Gilbert left the warmth of his house and stepped into the chilly November air to start his day. ‘Son of a bitch.’ The rear passenger tire on his truck was flat.

He was headed to his wife’s favorite hiking trail to scatter her ashes. She had been an avid hiker, had even joined a club which met every Saturday morning. Gilbert hadn’t shared her passion for hiking, and after she died, he felt pangs of regret for not having accompanied her at least once in a while. This particular trail ended at the highest point in the county and had a nice view of the city. She would like that.

With a grunt of annoyance, Gilbert set to work and replaced the punctured tire with the spare. Before tossing the flat into the bed of his truck, he inspected it, hoping to find the nail which he was certain was buried in the tread somewhere. He found nothing. He would drop off the tire at the auto service shop on Howard Street. The technician would find the nail. Gilbert would pick up the patched tire after he got back from his hike.

***

‘Didn’t find no nail,’ said the technician. He was young and lanky, his grey coveralls hanging loose on his frame. His embroidered name tag read ‘Tom,’ but his actual name was Brent. The coveralls belonged to his uncle who owned the auto shop.

‘Okay. If you didn’t find a nail, what did you find?’ Gilbert asked.

The young man led Gilbert into one of the service bays. ‘Nothing,’ he said. ‘Couldn’t find nothing wrong with your tire.’ He pulled Gilbert’s tire from a metal rack and bounced it expertly onto the concrete floor. He set a pressure gauge onto the valve stem. ‘See. 35 psi. She’s holding air pretty good. No leak.’ He removed the gauge, rummaged through a box of caps, and screwed one onto the valve stem.

‘That doesn’t make any sense,’ said Gilbert. ‘There has to be something wrong with it. A tire doesn’t just go flat all by itself.’

‘Well . . .’—the young man rubbed his thinly stubbled chin—‘maybe someone let the air out.’

‘What?’ Gilbert was startled by the thought that someone would have done this deliberately.

‘You know, as a prank. You got any teenagers in your neighborhood? Teenagers are always doing stuff like that.’

‘No. There aren’t any teenagers in my neighborhood.’

‘Oh. Well, maybe someone has it in for you. Did you piss anyone—I mean, did you upset anyone lately?’

Gilbert snorted. He was always upsetting people but no one recently. And then he remembered the wrong-way driver. The fellow—he was now certain it was a man—had taken a picture of him and his truck. He must know someone at the DMV. Sure. That had to be it. That fellow could have easily tracked me down through my license plate number.

But let air out of a tire? What kind of payback is that from a grown man? No. A real man would have slashed my tires. That’s what I would’ve done. Letting the air out was something a kid would do.

A realization set in.

Of course. That’s it. The driver was a kid, some snot-nosed kid who didn’t have the guts to take a knife to my tires.

‘You want me to take the spare off your truck and remount this tire?’ asked the technician.

Gilbert broke from his thoughts. ‘What? Oh. Yeah. Go ahead.’

But before the young man could roll the tire over to the truck, Gilbert held up a hand. ‘Whoa! Hold up there.’ Gilbert bent down to look at the valve stem. ‘Where the hell is my chrome cap?’

His wife had bought him a set of four chrome caps one day when she stopped at the local car wash. They were displayed on the counter, mixed in with all of the other impulse items next to the cash register. She thought they would look nice on his truck. She was always doing things like that, buying small items for him that caught her fancy. It was one of the many qualities he had loved about her.

Gilbert looked up at the technician. ‘I had a chrome cap on that valve stem,’ he said, barely controlling his anger. ‘Now theres a cheap, black, plastic cap.’ He stabbed a finger at the offending item.

The young man bent down to look. ‘You sure this isnt your cap?’

Gilbert directed a murderous glare at the young man.

‘Oh! I guess not. Ill go look for yours.’

At 6:45 a.m. the following morning, Gilbert once again left the warmth of his house and stepped into the chilly November air to start his day. ‘God damned son of a bitch!’ The rear passenger tire on his truck was flat. Again.

That night and for the following two nights, Gilbert camped out in the cab of his truck. He knew in his gut that sooner or later his tormentor would return, and Gilbert planned to catch him when he did.

At first, Gilbert thought of simply parking his truck in the garage, but that would have meant hauling out all of the junk that had accumulated in there over the past 35 years. Most of it belonged to his two boys—men, really, but to Gilbert, they would always be his boys.

Funny. As much as he loved his sons, he wasn’t all that close to them. It wasnt that he was estranged from them, but it was obvious that they had been so much closer to their mother. He had been hard on the boys when they were growing up, and whenever they made their weekly calls and he answered the phone, they would spend just a quick minute with him before asking for their mother. They would spend no less than a half hour with her, and it was only through her that he would learn of the joys and disappointments that wove in and out of their lives.

At around three a.m., after draining the last drop of coffee from the second of two thermoses that he had prepared, Gilbert heard the sharp ‘crunch’ of gravel through the thin opening of his window. He froze.

He was sitting low in the passenger seat of his truck and had previously angled the side mirror to catch the rear tire in its view, the same tire that had been deflated twice before.

Out here in this semi-rural part of the city, there were no street lights. What little light there was tonight came from the waning crescent moon, and it was a weak light. Gilbert saw only a dark shape come into view. It hunched near his rear tire. Whether it was man or beast was anyone’s guess. Gilbert guessed man.

When he heard the hiss of escaping air, he felt a knot in the pit of his stomach. He realized he didn’t have a plan for actually catching this stalker of his. If he stepped out now, wouldn’t the fellow just run away? And if that happened, what had Gilbert really accomplished? His tormentor would just come back at some later date—a week, a month—and it would be the anticipation—the not knowing when—that would fray Gilbert’s nerves, not the actual flat tire itself. What the hell did I get myself into?

Gilbert wished he had backed up to let that little sports car pass. It would have cost him nothing to have shown that small courtesy.

The hissing stopped. It was now or never, while this fellow was still crouched, busy putting the cap back onto the valve stem. Gilbert took a deep breath. He pulled his pistol from its holster and bolted from the truck. The man had been steady on one knee but toppled backwards onto the gravel driveway at Gilbert’s sudden appearance. He scrambled away in panic on hands and feet.

Stay right there! Dont move!’ Gilbert fired a warning shot into the ground. The blast cracked like thunder throughout the quiet neighborhood and set in motion a chorus of barking.

The man halted and raised his arms. ‘Dont shoot! Dont shoot!

Gilbert guessed the young man was in his early twenties, more of a kid than a man. He was thin. It wouldn’t surprise Gilbert if this fellow was a drug addict. He wore dark clothing: black jeans, black sneakers, and a black hoodie with the hood pulled over his head. A 21st century, urban ninja.

‘You sorry piece of crap!’ Gilbert bellowed, his anger boiling over. ‘I should shoot you. What the hell is wrong with you? Terrorizing me like that.’ Gilbert shook his head in disgust. ‘And for what? For a stupid little traffic incident? Huh? Grow up, man!’

As Gilbert unleashed his tirade, the young man sat slouched, staring at the ground, not meeting Gilbert’s eyes the way a child avoids the eyes of a scolding parent.

‘Well? What have you got to say for yourself?’

The young man mumbled something that Gilbert couldn’t quite hear. ‘What? Speak up for chrissakes!’

‘I said, “you should have let me pass.” I got there first.’ He said it quietly, his eyes still focused on the ground.

‘Oh for crying out loud!’ Gilbert said, exasperated. ‘You’re nothing but a whining baby. That’s what’s wrong with your generation. It’s all “me, me, me.” Well, let me tell you something, young man. It isn’t all “you, you, you,” so you better come to terms with that and pronto, or the next time you tangle with someone like me, you might not get off so easy!’

‘What are you gonna do,’ the young man asked.

‘Turn you over to the police for one thing.’

‘For what?’

‘What do you mean for what!’ Gilbert shouted. ‘For vandalizing my truck! That’s a crime you knothead!’

The young man looked at Gilbert for the first time. ‘I didn’t vandalize your truck,’ he said.

Was that a smirk? Was this little pissant smirking at me?

‘The hell you didn’t! I just caught you red-handed!’

‘Letting air out of a tire isn’t a crime. I didn’t damage the tire.’

Gilbert was taken aback. First by the self-assured tone of the young man but second because this punk may have a point. If there was no damage, had a crime actually been committed? Gilbert didn’t know.

‘Well, maybe it is a crime and maybe it isn’t. But I know that accessing personal information from the DMV database without permission is a crime, and your buddy who gave you my address is not only going to lose his job but he’s going to go to prison.’

The young man’s back stiffened. That got his attention. Gilbert had hit a nerve.

‘And when he gets out of prison, good luck finding another job with a felony conviction—any job. That’s right. It’s a felony to abuse state records.’ Gilbert had said this with authority, but he didn’t know if it was true or not. It didn’t matter, though. He saw fear in the young man’s eyes, and that was a satisfying feeling.

‘Get your wallet out and show me your driver’s license,’ Gilbert barked. He would call the police—although his neighbors had likely already done that—but he didn’t know how long it would take for them to arrive, and if this vandal got antsy and decided to make a run for it, Gilbert would at least have his ID.

The young man reached behind and pulled out his wallet, extending his arm to hand it to Gilbert. Only it wasn’t a wallet. Gilbert saw a flash just before he heard a loud bang, followed by two more flashes and two more bangs.

Gilbert stumbled back against his truck. A burning started in his chest and stomach and began to spread throughout his whole body. He slid to the ground, his rear hitting the gravel hard.

Gilbert’s eyes began to lose focus. His mind began a slow drift. Wasn’t he just talking to someone? He couldn’t remember.

Thanksgiving was only a few weeks away. He wondered if the boys would spend it with him. He thought they would. Of course they would.

A wailing rolled in from far away. It filled Gilbert’s head and then ended abruptly. Red and blue lights flashed. Gilbert didn’t remember putting up the holiday lights, but of course he must have. There they were. He always put them up the week before Thanksgiving, but for some reason he put them up early this year.

He was so tired. Stringing up the lights must have exhausted him. Gilbert Ostermann closed his eyes. He would take a nap, a short one, just to refresh himself. And then he would call the boys, ask them what their plans were for the coming holidays.

about the author

 

éctor Hernández received a bachelor’s degree in civil engineering. He lives in California and is now retired. His short stories have appeared in various publications, including Flash Fiction Magazine, After Dinner Conversation, and Literally Stories. 

Did you enjoy the story? Would you like to shout us a coffee?. Half of what you pay goes to the author the oher half goes to expense se.g. Maintaining hthe web site and setting up The Best of Café Lit book each year.

Saturday, 6 June 2026

SAFE HARBOUR by . S. .Nadja Zajdman, vodka,r,

 

                  

                                                             

Into the 1990s my mother Renata became increasingly active in Holocaust Education.  She trained as a docent at Montreal’s Holocaust Center.  She worked as an interviewer and researcher with McGill University’s oral history project Living Testimonies, which was a precursor to film director Steven Spielberg’s Shoah Foundation.   She attended international conferences.  She lectured to students in schools and on group tours, both at home and abroad.  She reunited long-lost relatives and rescued the lost identities of hidden children.  Mum became a wounded healer transforming lives.

          Each spring Mum traveled to Poland, spending an average of three months there.  She became the North American liaison for The Association of Hidden Children in Poland.  In Warsaw Mum roomed with friends, and worked in an office located on the same street where she had lived as a child. 

Some of those in Poland hidden during the war when they were children came late to the recognition of their Jewish roots.  Those who married mostly inter-married, and their children were raised as Catholics. 

At least one became a priest, and several became nuns.  Decades after the war, some were still too frightened to acknowledge their antecedents.  Many lived in poverty.  Mum lobbied for the establishment of pensions for those who were robbed of their parents and inheritance.  The lawyer’s daughter from Warsaw won her case.  She was also integrating her many identities and becoming the Holocaust educator and activist Renata Skotnicka-Zajdman.  

          What she was doing for others, Mum was about to do for herself.  In 1997, during a search to discover the fate of another child hidden in wartime, Mum stumbled on clues suggesting her wartime rescuer Janek Bartczak might be alive. 


During a time of war and a place of horror, friendship flourished between two young men wooing two Jewish sisters.  One of the men was a Polish Catholic; the other, a Polish Jew.  The Catholic youth became a smuggler.  When Warsaw’s Jews were walled into their ghetto, Janek’s business activities allowed him access to the girl he loved.  Unknown even to the members of his immediate family, he had joined the underground resistance movement.

          Janek Bartczak was generally perceived as a dandy.  His brother-in-law, a policeman who patrolled outside the Ghetto gates, dismissed him as a spiritual lightweight.  Janek strutted through the streets of the Ghetto in knee-high black leather boots, a black leather coat, and a Tyrolean-type hat.  His hair was flaxen and his features, Slavic-sharp.  His intimidating appearance made a powerful impression on his Jewish friend’s teen-age sister Renata.  His phantom would swagger through the back alleys of her memory for the next fifty years.  Trying to transmit his image as vividly as she could, Renata came to call her ghost “Richard Widmark,” for the sinister-looking film star.

          During the height of the deportations in the summer of 1942, Janek’s brother-in-law arrested Renata at the Ghetto gates.  The arrest was pre-arranged.  Pawel Golombek used his position to lead to safety the Jews he was supposed to be shutting in.  His apartment became a safe house.  He and his family supported not only themselves, but also the escapees they sheltered, by the smuggling activities of his wife’s two brothers, and by selling moonshine manufactured in their kitchen, as well as his policeman’s salary.  An unquestioned arrest, a child snatched from *Umschlagplatz whom he hid under his coat and delivered to the sanctuary presided over by his wife and mother-in-law—Golombek committed these audacious acts under the noses of the German occupiers and his anti-Semitic neighbours; acts which, had they been discovered, would have led not only to his execution, but to the execution of his entire family. 

         

As of September 1, 1942, there were two Jewish girls sheltered by the Golombeks.  There was the dark-haired, dark-eyed, ten-year-old Isabella whom Golombek’s sister-in-law claimed, to neighbours, to be her illegitimate daughter by a Roma.  There was blue-eyed Renata, whose chestnut-coloured hair had been bleached blonde by her brother.  Three years earlier she’d been setting the table for her mother’s birthday breakfast when the roar of the Luftwaffe, the planes of The Third Reich’s air force, signalled the invasion of Poland.  Since that day she had endured bombardment, homelessness, and refugee-hood.  She witnessed the death of her mother in Soviet-occupied Poland, and was caught in the German invasion of the Soviet Union.  She had slept in ditches and stolen food from fields.  Hiding on a farm, she had been repeatedly raped.  Like any other hunted animal, her throat was cut.  She had been beaten by Polish police,thrown into jail and further beaten in a cell shared with Polish prostitutes.  Preferring to die with family, Renata smuggled her way into the Warsaw Ghetto, to her brother, but her brother, preferring that Renata snatch a chance at life, smuggled her back out.

          On the evening of September 1, the Russians sprang a surprise bombing raid on Warsaw.  To identify their targets, they tossed flares from the sky. The Golombek family, along with Isabella, hastened to the basement of their apartment building.  Renata was instructed to remain upstairs, for fear she’d be recognized as a Jewess and betrayed by neighbours.  Feeling abandoned in the safe house during the bombardment on the anniversary of her dead mother’s birthday, the girl snapped.  She went to the bathroom, found a razor knife and lifted it to her wrist.  On the verge of severing an artery, Renata hesitated.  Instead, she began to scream.   Her uncontrollable cries were so loud they could be heard in the basement, even through the sound of bombardment.  Janek dashed towards the stairs.  “No!”  His sister cautioned.  Janek disregarded his sister’s warning, raced up to the apartment, and barged through the bathroom door.  He was appalled by what he saw.  “No!”  Janek yelled, echoing his sister, and knocked the razor knife out of Renata’s hand before she yielded to despair.  Then he darted to his bedroom, grabbed the blanket from off his bed, pulled Renata out of the bathroom, wrapped her in the blanket and then into his warm, strong arms.  While the flares flashed and the bombs exploded Janek stroked Renata’s trembling head, rocking her and soothing her with visions of survival and a new world at peace and free from humiliation, violence, and pain.  He sang lullabies to the quivering child, who felt like a wounded bird cupped in his hands, until she finally fell asleep. 

 

   In the immediate aftermath of the war, Renata’s brother led her to believe that Janek Bartczak was killed on Warsaw’s barricades during the second uprising in August of 1944.  She mourned him, and in her mind, she buried him.  Over fifty years later, in her capacity as an activist in an international network developing among Jews who survived genocide, my mother Renata decided to find out what happened to the child with whom she shared sanctuary in the Golombek household.  During her search, Mum stumbled upon an old address for one Janek Bartczak.  Like many Poles, it appeared he had gravitated to Chicago.

          My mother considered me her memory keeper, and ran regular spot-checks.  As she got older, the imperative to impart the legacy of her spectres grew increasingly intense.  Deceptively casual, she queried, “Who was Pawel Golombek?’

          Innocently, I answered, “He was a Polish policeman.”

          “Correct,” Mum pronounced, like a schoolteacher who was satisfied, but only for the moment.  “And who was Janek Bartczak?”  The bar was raised higher.  “Ahhh—Richard Widmark?”  Mum smiled.  Close enough.

          “What happened to Bartczak?”  The interrogation was relentless.  I had gotten away with the doppelganger analogy; now I knew I had to get this one right.

           “He was killed in the August ’44 uprising.”

          “Not necessarily.”  Mum was savouring the moment when she could deliver the punch line.  She then called a member of her network in Chicago, a woman for whom she’d been instrumental in re-uniting with a twin brother in Poland.  The woman went to the address the next day.

           “He doesn’t live there anymore.  The neighbours say he retired and moved to Arizona.”

           Within the week Bartczak resurrected, metaphorically enough, in Phoenix.

          “I have to go and see him.”  Mum stated the obvious, and immediately began to plan.  “I’ve got enough flight points on my Visa card to make the trip, but where would I stay?”

          Instantly I turned to the telephone and called Rabbi Grafstein, whom I’d met when she helped to establish Living Testimonies.  After being rejected by a Canadian congregation because of her gender, Sarah Leah Grafstein applied and was accepted as a prison chaplain in Phoenix, Arizona.  She would marry an American ten years her junior.  Together, the rabbi and her husband adopted a half-black boy. 

          “Your mother will stay with me.”  Rabbi Grafstein responded as I hoped she would.  “Meeting Renata changed my life.” 

          “Janek’s story must be told.”  Mum moved into crusader mode.  “But who can interview him?  Regina says his English is poor.”

          “Are you kidding?”  Incredulous, I stared at the woman who was missing the obvious.  “YOU will!”

          “Me?”  Mum was overwhelmed by the suggestion.

          “You’ll conduct the interview in Polish.  Who could do it better?  Everything you’ve done has led to this.”  As I became aware of the obvious, my breath caught.   “You appear to have been chosen.”

          “Oh my.”  As the import of my words sunk in, Mum shuddered.     “But who would set it up?  We have cameras and a technician in the studio here, but how would we do it in Phoenix?”

          Once more, I called Rabbi Grafstein, who then placed a call to California.  Mum was officially registered as an interviewer for Spielberg’s recently established Shoah Foundation.  Technicians and equipment were expedited to Arizona.

          Mum flew to Phoenix at Easter.  The metaphors were becoming outrageous.

          When Mum and Janek reunited, she fell into his arms.

            “You’re alive, you’re alive.”  She huddled against the older man’s chest, the way she had on the night of the bombardment.  “I still can’t believe it.”

          The elderly gentleman held her close.  “So are you,” he whispered.  “This is even harder to believe.”

          Janek was now in his mid-seventies.  He was still vigorous and strong.  His flaxen-coloured hair had thinned out, and what was left of it was white.

Living in freedom and peace had allowed Janek to shed his tough persona, and his natural sweetness shone through the features of his broad Slavic face. 

As they got their bearings, the rescued and rescuer updated each other on what had turned out to be their lives. 

“My brother and I accepted that you were trapped and killed on the barricades during the ’44 uprising.”  Mum gazed at her wartime rescuer, in wonder.  “How did you manage to escape?”

          “The same way you did, moja kochana.”  Janek gazed tenderly at the woman, now in late middle age, whose fate he had accepted would forever remain a mystery.   “I escaped through the sewers.  Unlike you, however, once I got out, I didn’t have far to go.  When I hauled myself out of a manhole I looked up to see a policeman staring at me.  It was Pawel, my very own brother-in-law!”

          Muj Boze!”  Mum erupted, unconsciously shifting into her wartime Catholic persona.  “My Lord!”

“Oh yes!”  Janek agreed.  “Can you imagine?   I was starving.  I was stinking, I was wet and I was filthy, and I resurface in downtown Warsaw like a vision out of hell!”

          “What a shock for Pawel,” Mum gasped, “But a happy shock!”

“Oh, I’m not sure he recognized me right away, but I recognized him!  I think the shock for Pawel was discovering that I had joined The Underground and fought in The Uprising.  He didn’t think much of me, until then.”  Janek was obviously proud to have earned the respect of his heroic brother-in-law.

 Continuing to fight in the underground resistance movement, Janek was captured by the Germans and sent to a prisoner-of-war camp in Germany.  He escaped, made his way to Italy and joined the Polish army-in-exile under General Anders’ command.  Janek’s unit was transferred to Britain.  Before war’s end, Polish warriors were shattered by the news that the dream of an independent Poland was lost; betrayed at Yalta by Roosevelt and Churchill.  Like many Polish soldiers and pilots who helped to save the country that ultimately betrayed them, Janek felt he couldn’t go home.  While still in power, Churchill offered British citizenship to displaced Polish servicemen and women.  After he was ousted from power, the new Labour government tried to scare displaced Polish military personnel into leaving.  Like thousands of Polish refugee servicemen and women, Janek decided his future lay elsewhere.  He immigrated to South America.  Only in 1947 was he able to notify his family in now-Communist Poland that he was alive.

 In time, Janek married an Argentinian woman.  His wife was now serving coffee and cake.  In awe, she watched the woman who had risen like a phoenix from the ashes.  So did their son, Antonio, with his Jewish wife and their two young boys.  Their grandfather had never told them of his wartime exploits.  True heroes are silent, or dead.

          Unlike most subjects interviewed for Holocaust oral history projects, Janek was relaxed.  He told his tale as if holding a long-overdue conversation.  He was almost gleeful as he recounted how often and well he outwitted both the German occupiers and his treacherous Polish neighbours.  When Mum asked why he behaved as he had, Janek responded by placing his hand over his heart.  His testimony was a gift to both of them.  The woman whom he rescued as a child was now a rescuer of Memory. 

When Mum returned home, she made it her mission to have Janek officially recognized and honoured by the Israeli government as a member of an elite category known as Righteous Among The Nations.  Israeli law stipulates that at least two living witnesses submit depositions in order to validate the nomination of a candidate.  Having yet to locate the hidden child Isabella (though they would), Mum’s network launched a search for Janek’s wartime Jewish lover.  She was traced to New York City.  In the intervening fifty years Ada had been twice divorced and recently widowed. 

“You’ve got to do this,” Mum commanded.

“Of course I will.”  Ada was in a daze, reeling from the news that her wartime lover was alive.  Ada and Janek reunited over a telephone line, but they would never set eyes on each other, again.

*The central train platform where Ghetto Jews were collected and carted off for mass murder, 

 

           Before leaving for her annual stay in Poland, Mum called Janek to say good-bye.  He was a widower, now. 

 Three days after Mum’s departure, Antonio called me.

 “Oh gosh!  I’m so sorry.  I’m so very very sorry.”

          “Will you tell your mother?’

          “Of course I will.”

          Calculating the time change between North America and Europe, I estimated that I could reach Mum in her Warsaw office.

          “Sweetheart!  This isn’t our usual time to talk.  Is something going on?  What’s up?”

          My silence sent Mum into alert.  “Something is wrong.  What is it?”

          Sadly, I told her.  Janek Bartczak suffered a stroke and died a second and final time.  He was seventy-nine years old.

          “No!  Oh no!  I’d only just found him and now I’ve lost him again!”  Mum was grief-stricken.

          “No Mum.”  My voice was soft with sorrow.  “You haven’t lost him.  Antonio told me his father died at peace because he finally found out what happened to you and to the other child sheltered in his home.  Who he was and what he did won’t be lost because you recorded it.  The Shoah Foundation will keep Janek’s story and memory safe.  He’s safe now, Mum.  He’s safe.  Janek will never be lost again.”

          Mum was in tears, and I was near tears.  Yet, despite her grief, my mother recognized the truth of my words.  Not only had she taken the time to say good-bye but Renata, a wild orphan of war, also found a way of saying Thank You. 

 

Since Janek wasn’t in a position to receive it, a notice was sent to Antonio, summoning him to an Israeli consulate.  In a desert city in the American Southwest, in a ceremony witnessed by his Jewish wife and their two sons, Janek’s son was presented with a certificate and medal for his father’s part in providing a safe harbour during a violent storm, and for his magnificent, and now-stilled heart. 

 

 Abou the author.

. Nadja Zajdman is a Canadian author.  In 2022 she published the story collection The Memory Keeper, as well as the memoir I Want You To Be Free, the story of her late mother, the pioneering Holocaust educator and activist Renata Skotnicka-Zajdman.  In 2023 Zajdman followed up with a second memoir, Daddy’s Remains.  In 2024 Bridgehouse brought out Zajdman’s essay collection, Between Worlds.

         

           

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