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Book Review: Elie Wiesel's Unending Search

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  • Book Review: Elie Wiesel's Unending Search

    ELIE WIESEL'S UNENDING SEARCH
    By Donna Rifkind

    Washington Post
    March 23 2009

    A MAD DESIRE TO DANCE
    By Elie Wiesel
    Translated from the French by Catherine Temerson
    Knopf. 274 pp. $25

    When writers become statesmen -- Gunter Grass, say, or Nadine Gordimer
    -- it's easy to forget that they first connected to audiences in
    one-on-one encounters between author and reader. These days, we're
    more apt to regard the large-scale public face of Elie Wiesel:
    his Nobel Prize, his "Oprah" appearances, his condemnations of
    the Armenian and Darfur genocides, the news that his life savings
    were pillaged by Bernard Madoff. We're less likely to remember that
    "Night," Wiesel's internationally best-selling Holocaust-survival
    memoir, was rejected in the late 1950s by major American publishers
    before it finally found a home, for a $100 advance, at a courageous
    then-independent house called Hill & Wang. The first print run of
    "Night" was 3,000 copies and took three years to sell.

    The publication of Wiesel's latest novel provides a good opportunity
    to return to that intimate connection that he first established with
    those few early readers of "Night." The book's style and themes will
    be familiar to those acquainted with his previous fiction (now 80,
    he has written more than 50 books), yet "A Mad Desire to Dance"
    shows the sensibility of a literary wanderer who has not finished
    searching for answers to his original anguished questions.

    The new novel's narrator is 60ish Doriel Waldman, himself a certain
    kind of spiritual wanderer. What Doriel asks, again and again,
    is how he, a Holocaust survivor, can hope for faith, equanimity
    or even sanity during a life "amputated" by overwhelming personal
    suffering and loss. Like other Wiesel protagonists, he's preoccupied
    with madness -- his own and the world's -- and he seeks treatment in
    the office of Therèse Goldschmidt, a Jewish psychotherapist who also
    managed to survive the war.

    If nothing else, Doriel's sessions with his therapist prove how
    thoroughly unsatisfactory is the shorthand description "survivor." It's
    true that Doriel survived the war as a young child in Poland, hiding
    in a barn with his father while his mother, blond and passing as a
    gentile, traveled as a secret liaison for the Jewish Resistance. Yet
    for Doriel, survival has meant not triumph but a life painfully
    truncated. Most of his family died by the time he was 11: his two
    siblings as victims of the Nazis, and his parents in a car crash in
    France shortly after the war, preparing to make their way to Palestine.

    Since childhood Doriel has drifted, staying with an uncle in Brooklyn,
    wandering among yeshivas in New York and Jerusalem, spending time near
    his parents' graves in France, alighting in Manhattan. He never managed
    to maintain a strong connection to another person or to lay his ghosts
    to rest. For what purpose has he survived? For this empty pilgrimage?

    It's this mystery, and more, that Doriel dances fitfully around during
    his therapy sessions. There is also the question of where he acquired
    his considerable wealth, and the nagging suspicion, whose clues he
    has attempted to bury, that his mother may have had an affair during
    her Resistance missions. On the whole, his visits to Goldschmidt are
    mutually frustrating experiences. The doctor despairs of curing his
    bottomless despair, while the patient dodges unbearable truths in a
    filibuster of philosophizing and storytelling.

    Some of Doriel's stories are glancingly personal, touching on several
    of his doomed romantic relationships, or on his spectral reconnections
    with other survivors. Others are woven from classical Jewish texts,
    for Doriel is a serious and sometimes too-fervent scholar, giving
    lessons to adolescents on medieval Jewish history. He's been taught
    that memory is the cornerstone of his religion -- over and over again
    in their liturgy, faithful Jews exhort themselves never to forget --
    but how can one live within that faith if forgetting is the only way
    to endure?

    This is a ruthless book, with little of the redemptive spirit that
    American readers have grown attached to in tales of the Holocaust. It's
    a difficult story, moreover, told in a difficult way, deliberately
    discursive and without regard for chronology. Its purpose is to
    disorient the reader, echoing Doriel's psychological dislocation,
    wandering as he wanders. The translation provides additional obstacles,
    distancing readers from the story with distracting word choices
    ("fecundated"?) and calcified dialogue.

    Surprisingly, though, despite these impediments, a reader willing to
    navigate the thickets will find rewards. The novel's grim satisfactions
    lie in a sense of shared responsibility between teller and listener,
    a confidential yet far-reaching partnership that began four decades
    ago with "Night." "I tell my students and my readers," Wiesel has said,
    "that whoever reads or listens to a witness becomes a witness."

    Rifkind is a book reviewer based in Los Angeles.
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