IN MEMORY OF CHILD HURBINEK
Hurbinek was a nobody, a child of death, a child of Auschwitz. He looked
about three years old, no one knew anything of him, he could not speak and he
had no name; that curious name, Hurbinek, had been given to him by us,
perhaps by one of the women who had interpreted with those syllables one of
the inarticulate sounds that the baby let out now and again. He was paralysed
from the waist down, with atrophied legs, thin as sticks; but his eyes, lost in his
triangular and wasted face, flashed terribly alive, full of demand, assertion, of the
will to break loose, to shatter the tomb of his dumbness. The speech he lacked,
which no one had bothered to teach him, the need of speech charged his stare
with explosive urgency: it was a stare both savage and human, even mature, a
judgement, which none of us could support, so heavy was it with force and
anguish. ..…
During the night we listened carefully: ….. from Hurbinek’s corner there
occasionally came a sound, a word. It was not, admittedly, always exactly the
same word, but it was certainly an articulated word; or better, several slightly
different articulated words, experimental variations on a theme, on a root,
perhaps on a name.
Hurbinek, who was three years old and perhaps had been born in
Auschwitz and had never seen a tree; Hurbinek, who had fought like a man, to
the last breath, to gain his entry into the world of men, from which a bestial
power had excluded him; Hurbinek, the nameless, whose tiny forearm - even his
- bore the tattoo of Auschwitz; Hurbinek died in the first days of March 1945,
free but not redeemed.
Nothing remains of him: he bears witness through these words of mine. 34
[ 34 Primo Levi, "The Reawakening," pp. 25-26 ]