Underground Soldier (17 page)

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Authors: Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch

BOOK: Underground Soldier
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“Your loved ones,” she said. “They can trace them for you.”

Did that mean they would be able to find Mama and Tato and Lida? It seemed almost too good to be true.

I was nervous by the time it was finally my turn. I sat down in front of a woman with lips painted the colour of blood. She had a name tag, but it was written in English.

I held out my hand and said in Ukrainian. “I am Luka Barukovich. What is your name?”

“I’m Jean Smith from Wisconsin,” she replied — in Ukrainian — as she tapped her name tag with an index finger. “But you can call me Genya.”

“Thank you, Pani Genya,” I said. “Can you find my parents, my friends? I can give you their names …”

“Hold on,” said Genya. She ripped some forms off a pad and placed them in front of me. “We need to fill out one of these for each of your loved ones. We’ll enter them onto our lists and circulate them through all of the DP camps. Then we hope for the best.”

I picked up the pieces of paper and was about to leave, but Genya put one of her hands on mine. “It’s okay,” she said. “Stay here and I’ll fill them out with you.”

I began with my father.

“If he was taken to Siberia, we cannot help you,” she said. “Our records only extend to the areas that were occupied by the Nazis.”

Her words hit me like a hammer. Of course they wouldn’t know. They had defeated the Nazis, but not the Soviets. How would I ever manage to find Tato? “My mother was taken as an Ostarbeiter,” I said. “Can we start with her, then? Raisa Barukovich.”

Genya’s face brightened and she began to fill out one of the forms. “Yes. Do you have any information on where she was taken?”

“No, but I know when. She was taken from Kyiv during the last week in November 1942. The Nazis took us both at the same time, but we were put on two different trains.”

“That helps a bit,” said Genya. “We’ll put it in our system.”

“I am also looking for Lida Ferezuk.”

“Is she also family?”

“No. A close friend. She was in the same labour camp as me.”

“But you would have been liberated at the same time.”

“No,” I replied, considering how I would answer her. My escape from the camp and my time fighting in the Underground was something I didn’t want to talk about yet. On the other hand, I needed to give Genya as much information as possible. “If you show me a map, I can point out where the camp was.”

Genya got up and looked around, then came back with a big map of the Reich. Thank goodness Margarete and Helmut had shown me their actual location. “There,” I said, my finger on an area close to the Oder River. “The work camp was somewhere in the countryside here. There was a bomb factory in a small town around there.”

“That area is in Soviet control now,” said Genya. “But by the time they arrived, that camp was emptied and the bomb factory destroyed.”

“What does that mean?”

“Hard to say,” replied Genya. “Leave it with me.”

* * *

Time crawled in the days that followed, days that were some of the hardest I had ever lived through. I had become accustomed to action, to solving problems on my own. Now I was stuck waiting for others to do things for me. They gave me no responsibilities, and nothing to do. I felt so powerless.

All June, I occupied my time finding other Ukrainian-speaking refugees. “Have you heard of Lida Ferezuk or Raisa Barukovich?” I would ask. They’d shake their heads, then list off their own loved ones.

Other than that, I stood in lineups: for food, water, soap, showers. It got to the point that if I saw people lining up, I’d stand in line first and then ask what they were waiting for.

It was difficult to find a place to sleep. Every nook and cranny of intact buildings and clear patch of ground had been claimed by someone. People would roll out their blankets and sleep just about anywhere. One night I slept in the back of a potato truck. Another time I slept sitting up, leaning against a wall.

Our camp was just down the road from another and another and another. I marvelled that the Americans were able and willing and compassionate enough to help so many people. But how long could it go on? And without my parents or Martina or Lida, my life felt not worth living. Like so many others, I visited the other camps and asked everyone I met the same questions:
Have you heard of Lida Ferezuk or Raisa Barukovich? Do you know where they are?

People began tacking up slips of paper at the entrances to the camps. On each one was a notice about loved ones, then a message about where the letter writer could be found. These slips of paper multiplied, fluttering in the wind like the furry pelt of a strange animal. I added my own, and each morning I checked the papers at the gates of every camp in my area.

Then one day, as I stood in a soup lineup, Genya came up to me, her eyes alight. “Why haven’t you come back to see me, Luka?”

“I’ve been looking for my mother and Lida on my own.”

“Well, come with me now. I have some information.”

I followed her through a back door of the Red Cross building into what looked like a lunchroom for the staff. “Wait here,” she said. “I’ll be right back.”

A man wearing a Red Cross badge on his white shirt eyed me suspiciously as he chewed on a cheese sandwich, but he didn’t tell me to leave.

Genya came back, holding a manila envelope. As she sat across from me, she tore it open. “Twelve Ostarbeiters who were originally from Camp 14 …” She looked up at me. “That camp your friend was at has been labelled Camp 14 by the Americans. Anyway, these Ostarbeiters were relocated to Bavaria and were liberated by the Americans in April. According to our information, one of them was named Lida Ferezuk.”

I was so surprised by what she said that it took me a moment to digest it. “Lida’s
alive
? And you know where she
is
?”

“She was very ill and was being treated in an American hospital in Austria until a few days ago. We can take you to the DP camp that she was released to — it’s not that far from here. But remember, everyone goes from camp to camp, so I can’t guarantee that she’ll still be there.”

Chapter Twenty-Four
Sun-washed Barn

Genya got permission to drive me herself in a Red Cross van. “I’m dropping off supplies as well,” she said. “So it just makes sense to take you with me.”

The road was crowded with refugees, some coming to our camp and others leaving. Genya blasted her horn and nudged forward. A few people moved, but others ignored her. Some carried ragged suitcases, others pushed wheelbarrows. One woman balanced a wicker basket filled with jam jars on her head. I figured I could walk faster than Genya drove, but didn’t want to hurt her feelings.

She drummed the steering wheel impatiently with her fingertips. “You’d probably get lost if you walked.”

That made me smile. If only I could tell her all the places I had been.

I scanned the crowds as we inched forward. It was a good view from the high front seat of the van, so every time I saw a small girl with dark blond hair, I’d watch until I could see her face. My biggest fear was that Lida would leave her DP camp before I got there and I’d lose track of her forever. Genya and I travelled for what seemed like hours.

“We’re here,” she said finally, drawing the van beside a crumbling stone entrance that was covered with the usual hundreds of fluttering papers — pinned to cracks, taped in a line, tied with string.

“You’d like to check the papers, I imagine,” Genya said. “Good luck, and I hope you find your Lida.”

“Thank you,” I said, giving her a firm handshake. I opened the door and stepped out of the van. Genya waved as she drove inside the complex to drop off her supplies. I didn’t stop to read the fluttering papers. I could do that any time. Right now I had to find Lida. But how could I do that, among these thousands?

I walked down the dusty main roadway and looked carefully at each person I passed. What if Lida was taller now, or looked different after all this time? Would I even be able to recognize her?

As I passed one cluster of people after another, I realized that this camp seemed more permanent than the one I had come from. Maybe it was because the network of stone buildings still contained discernible rooms. So what if they had no covering? Fractured families had settled into the corners of the large roofless rooms, some pitching makeshift tents for privacy, others living in the open, seemingly content with their invisible walls. A woman in a red bandanna crouched over a small charcoal fire that she’d lit in what had likely been a hallway, heating a lumpy, greyish liquid in a frying pan. A few buildings away, a grizzled old man sat on what was left of a stone wall and rocked a toddler as he sang a lullaby.

When I got to the end of the main street, I walked up the next street, then turned and walked down the next. Every now and then, amid the hum of many languages, I’d hear people speaking Ukrainian. I’d stop and listen first, then ask if they knew Lida Ferezuk. No one did.

I did not stop looking until it got so dark I could no longer see. Had Genya been mistaken? Or perhaps Lida had been here but had left for a different camp. The thought of being so close to her, yet losing her again, overwhelmed me with sadness. I found a grassy spot against a tumbledown wall and fell into an uneasy sleep.

Early the next morning I felt a hand grip my shoulder. “Are you all right?”

I opened my eyes. A saggy-jowled woman with wild grey hair thrust half a slice of bread into my hands. “There’s a lineup over there if you want more,” she said, pointing.

I looked down at the bread, then back at the woman. It touched me that she would be so generous to a stranger. “Thank you.”

“It’s a new day,” said the old woman. “Don’t waste it.” With that, she walked away.

I took a bite of the bread and chewed it slowly. She was right. Time to get up and look for Lida.

I walked up and down the same streets as I had the day before, stopping every time I heard someone speak Ukrainian. I would ask if they knew Lida Ferezuk. Just like yesterday, no one did.

But then a woman said, “You should try our church. We are all drawn to it sooner or later.”

“There’s a church?”

“This whole place used to be a convent,” she said. “The chapel and church were destroyed, but we rebuilt ourselves a most beautiful Ukrainian church.” She pointed to a barn at the edge of the camp, under a bank of trees. “It’s there.”

When I got closer to the barn I began to have doubts. The building was so lopsided that it looked like it might collapse any minute, but there was a well-trod pathway leading right to it, and the door was open.

I stepped inside. Sunlight poured in from the holes in the roof, lighting up a rough wooden altar propped up on tin-can legs. In the centre of the altar was an ancient icon of the Virgin Mary. I gasped at the sight of it. So much had been stolen from us that could never be returned, but at least this icon had been reclaimed.

On her knees before the altar was a small, thin girl with soft tufts of dark blond hair. I would have known her anywhere.

I dared not breathe.

Lida whispered a prayer to the Virgin and I heard a list of names. One of them was my own.

I would have stepped forward and hugged her right then, but she was praying, and I didn’t want to disturb her. Instead I stood and watched in silence. On her feet were sturdy leather boots and that made me think of Martina’s handmade boots — the ones that replaced her
postoly
.

I said a silent prayer myself — for Martina. She and Lida would have loved each other.

As Lida made the sign of the cross and began to stand up, I had a moment of doubt. Would she be happy to see me, or would she be angry that I had left her in the camp when I’d escaped?

She stumbled and nearly fell.

I dashed over and caught her elbow. “Let me help you.”

Lida looked up, squinting in the sunlight. “Luka? …
Luka!

“They told me I might find you here,” I whispered. I wanted to give her a kiss on the cheek, but I thought that might frighten her. Instead, I knelt in front of her and placed her arms around my neck and together we stood up.

“Dear Lida. I am so glad I found you.”

Her arms were still wrapped around my neck and that was fine with me. She rested her head against my shoulder and it was the happiest moment of my life. But then I thought I heard a sob, and that got me worried. Maybe she wasn’t really happy to see me. She took a deep breath, then said, “I dreamt of you the night you escaped.”

So she wasn’t angry, just sad. I had been thinking of her as well. Maybe we’d been thinking of each other at the exact same time? “I hated leaving you behind.”

She took her arms from my neck so she could look me in the eye. “If you hadn’t left when you did, I doubt you’d be alive now.”

“And how did you stay alive?” I asked.

Her eyes clouded over. “It wasn’t exactly easy,” she said. Then she looked up at my face. “Sometimes you have to fight back.”

I would have to ask her how she’d fought back, but not right now. And I would tell her about the Undergound — but not right now. Instead, we talked of the people we both knew from the camp: Julie’s bravery and Zenia’s escape.

“Have you found your sister?” I asked.

She shook her head. “Not yet.” Then she said, “What about you? Have you found your parents?”

“No,” I told her. “But the American Red Cross thinks they may be able to find Mama. After all, they found you.”

Lida smiled at that. “I’m glad they did.”

“It’s my father I’m most worried about, though,” I said. “With him being in Siberia, the Red Cross can’t contact him.”

Lida brushed a stray lock of hair from my cheek. “That may change.”

As we walked out of the church together, I longed to hold Lida’s hand, but I didn’t know if she’d want me to. We talked about a thousand other things — I don’t even know all that we said — it’s just that I loved being with her. If I could keep her beside me for the rest of my life, I knew I’d be happy.

* * *

Over the next days and weeks, I spent every day with Lida. Together we helped families patch together temporary homes, assisted with first aid, organized ball games with younger children. It was good to see these young boys and girls laughing out loud and running. After all the horrors they’d lived through, this was a gift for us as well as them. Lida’s feet were weak and sometimes she stumbled, yet she never complained. But when her socks slipped down to her ankles, I saw her scars.

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