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A Passover in Rome
By Aharon ben Anshel
The Jewish Press
3 March 2005
At Rose Kryger's funeral, her
son Meir, now a physician in Winnipeg, was surprised
to learn from the rabbi's funeral oration that his mother
had some bottled up secrets and had yearned to be a
writer. After the week of shiva, he discovered a spiral-bound
notebook and some audio cassettes in a drawer.
A text of over 200 pages, written in Yiddish, was the
only valuable heirloom that Rose Kryger bequeathed,
and hers is a story of an indomitable survivor of the
Second World War, and her narrow escape from persecution.
Neither she nor her nuclear family ever fell in the
hands of Nazis, nor were they interred in concentration
camps.
This is a story of survival that simply had to be told,
complete with pathos and even a bit of humor.
Henry Welch, Rose Kryger`s nephew Zvi, and the co-narrator
of this book, relates the story of a Polish-Jewish couple
who were hidden by their local Catholic parish priest,
disguised as servants. After the war, they were so grateful
to him for saving them from the Holocaust that they
offered to convert and become Catholics. Their decision
having been made - they were baptized and lived for
years as Catholics until one day, some Jews who had
survived returned and renewed their Jewish community.
The husband and the wife grew nostalgic as they saw
Jews shopping for fish on Fridays and preparing for
Shabbos and attending services in the local shul. They
admitted to themselves that there was something missing
in their lives, so they too decided to prepare and enjoy
a real Shabbos meal, with gefilte fish, chopped chicken
livers, and roast goose - the works!
Then their priest came by and discovered them eating
meat on a Friday, the man wearing a kippah with a wine
glass in hand making Kiddush. The Shabbos candles were
lit and the table was set with a big, crispy roast goose.
He barged in, bewildered and confused and said: "You
can`t eat goose on a Friday."
The Jew put his fingers in a glass
of water and sprinkled a few drops at the goose and
said: "goose, goose - you are no more goose - you
are now a fish."
Rose apparently began her manuscript as a result of
a family gathering at a Passover celebration in Rome
in 1984. After the discovery of her "work in progress,"
her nephew Zvi added his own story in between hers and
the combination fleshes out a truly fascinating story.
There are many thousands of stories
about this era, told and re-told by the survivors and
their families, but few cast a happy ending as this
one does, or are as spell-binding and entertaining.
Title: A Passover in Rome
Author: Henry Welch and Rose Kryger
Publisher: Vantage Press, New York, NY
Reviewed by Aharon ben Anshel
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