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Aminat Awosanya HIST 1112-03
Formal Response PaperNovember 30, 2012
Under A Cruel Star, written by Heda Margolius Kovaly and published in 1986 is a
stimulating and powerful memoir of a Jew. It is a written account based on the early
struggles of Kovaly and many other Czechs during the occupation by Germany, which
is then followed by the Soviet Union finally leading to her victorious escape. The
expressiveness of Kovaly gives a strong perception of the trials faced by the
Czechoslovaks, which are mostly Jews, persuades the reader that the liberation
granted in these recent times have been selfishly relished, as the authority of these
oppressive regimes crush the brief liberation of the Czechs. In this book, Kovaly
symbolizes the voice of many Czechs, who were afraid of the consequences of being
forthright.
I studied World History in my secondary school and the occupation of
Czechoslovakia by Germany and Soviet Union and believed that I understood the
happenings of these major events in History. However, this book illustrated the truth
of what history books do not always explain. The Cruelty of Fascism is brought to
realization with this book as the promises of these regimes are later violated with the
indecent treatment of citizens. The opinion of the writer soon merges with that of the
reader, who begins to note the inefficiency of the people to rise against the leadership.
Kovaly’s experiences are detailed as she and her family had been affected by the
travesty all because she was Jewish. This memoir is not about her views of what had
happened to unknown people, but rather a real story that many people cannot relate
to and so they sympathize to. With the personalizing of this historical event Kovaly
communicates the hardship of not only just her, but also the other Jews and political
prisoners. When she escapes the concentration camp in Lodz also known as the
“Litzmannstadt Ghetto,” she faces rejection from some people she once knew before
German occupation, which later affects her as she learns to trust less people in her life
and got used to being alone when her husband was sentenced to death due to the
infamous “Slansky Case.” The violence many prisoners encountered with people being
shot cold blooded every day or locked in the gas chambers provides heavy gloominess
to her story. The fact that the population were all ridden with fear of the SS men and
also the black shirts during the two occupations, hints on the hope of the Czechs for
revolution and a very influential leader to overthrow the occupations.
I believe that her use of language is especially compelling that all audience of
different views and ideals are able to identify and relate to even though not by their
experiences. Kovaly talks about how many people lost their privacy as fear had been
driven into many people to the point that each neighbor spied on the other to protect
themselves. The reader would have believed that the helplessness of Kovaly was over
when the Germans had left Czechoslovakia to its devices, but her struggles continue on:
“when the Germans finally withdrew, I could go outside for the first time in years
without fear.” Kovaly struggles for years with the loss of all her family members and
then the loss of her husband, Rudolf Margolius, leaving her: “ lying in my bed as though it
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were a coffin. The streets of Prague were seething with rage. Rumor had it that I had
been kidnapped together with my child and taken abroad, that I was in jail, that I had
committed suicide. The truth was that there was not much left in me.”
Kovaly talks about losses in her life by beginning her story:
"Three forces carved the landscape of my life. Two of them crushed half the world. The
third was very small and weak and, actually, invisible. It was a shy little bird in my rib
cage an inch or two below my stomach. Sometimes in the most unexpected moments the
bird would wake up, lift its head, and flutter its wing in rapture. Then I too would lift my
head because, for that short moment, I would know for certain that love and hope are
infinitely more powerful than hate and fury, and that somewhere beyond the line of my
horizon there was life indestructible, always triumphant." (Page 5)
The most significant part of the book is Kovaly’s acceptance and awareness to the
struggle of the people and not just herself. Her ability to understand the reasons of
cruelty of the people towards her and others was due to fear without compromising her
judgement of their characters, but rather recognizes their fear with a mature
comprehension. Kovaly rarely blames herself for anything, and notices the reoccurrence
of anti-semitism under the Soviet occupation and did not see herself anything, but
human even when she was attacked in the streets due to her husband’s persecution. This
book does not just state how different kovaly is from others, who survived the German
AND Soviet annexing of Czechoslovakia it makes her more human as the reader can
sense her emotions and her lack of placing blame on everyone for what occurred to her,
but idolize her sense of acceptance alongside her ability to move on with her life and
seek a new journey. Her descriptions put to shame what many people had presumed of
what had occurred during that time period, giving her the ability to raise awareness to
many people who have never been experienced such calamity.
Recommended