Mouse Trap

The name of this post isn’t taken from the title of the famously long-running Agatha Christie play. It’s from chapter 6 in volume 1 of Art Spiegelman’s Pulitzer Prize-winning graphic novel, Maus.

maus

“My Father Bleeds History,” and volume 2 of Maus, “And Here My Troubles Began,” present an unblinking and unsparing look at the Holocaust, as related by Spiegelman’s father. In harrowing detail, Spiegelman depicts the desperate efforts made by his father to survive, even when it meant favoring himself and his family over other Jews.

Like the Agatha Christie play, last night’s featured segment on 60 Minutes is a murder mystery. It grapples with an instance of Nazi collaboration by Jews, and one member in particular of the Jewish Council in Holland. The greater truth is that, when it’s a matter of survival, there will always be collaborators.

Acts of betrayal made under tragic life-and-death circumstances are rationalized as, “I did what I had to do to survive.” Sad to say, a feckless variation of that, “I was following orders,” was used as a defense by Nazi soldiers who were accused of atrocities.

Once again I will mention Arno Maris, my drawing instructor in college. Under cover of night, Arno escaped from Nazi occupation in the Netherlands in a row boat. Having no expectation of surviving, by an incredible stroke of luck he was rescued by a Merchant Marine ship.

Arno Maris, 2 Jul 1916 – 18 Apr 1996

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