A war for father and son Andre van der Veeke l. The war was over. I could be born. After the materni ty-nurse slapped my buttocks, I started yelling and didn't stop. I cried for ages. I cried for days and nights. I terrorized my parents, grandparents and my auntie who lived in. Neighbors knocked on the walls, or stamped on the ceiling. I brought the residents of a whole housing-block to despair. My parents thought fondly back to the wailing of the air raid-sirens during the war. My high-pitched squeal was worse, more compelling and certainly more agonizing, because it came from their own flesh and blood. Something was the matter with me. My mother sought the cause of this misery within herself. She doubted the quality of her milk. To thin, to blue, to watery? War milk? The doctor, who came from another neighbor hood, had forbidden her to feed me too often. Let him scream, its good for his lungs, was his advice. My parents lived in with my mother's parents. As was normal in those days, most certainly in a bombed city. My grandparents were quiet, civilized people. They did not quite grasp what they were in for. They drifted on a pink cloud, desiring for continuity. They wanted grandchildren. Life began to take its human shape, so why take fate into account? How could fate weigh less than five pounds? Within two weeks, their first grandchild's howling drove them out of their house. They retreated to a gloomy attic, between furniture and clothes from the past. Naturally, I had no clue as to what I was doing. I did not know the power of my despair and raging wails. I was only quiet when drin king from my mother. Then, everybody in the house and neighborhood would sigh of relief. The sudden silence was sometimes so overwhelming that my hou semates cringed. What could they do in the short while I was silent? My parents would later tell me about these things, in carefully chosen words. Causes for my deviant behavior were never mentioned. Even gentle speculations were to be avoided. They had fro zen this dreadful period in their memory, and would not allow it to thaw. When the change came? How old was I when I began to behave normally? That's what I was curious about. My parents avoided my compelling questions .They pretended they did not know the answer. Later, they insinuated that truth was of minor issue in this case. It was obvious that I thought up an answer to my questions. My post-war, chronic fits of crying were due to discontent and jealousy, was my own juvenile theory. I was an angry baby, because I had missed the war, that greatest spec tacle of the 20th Century. Later, I heard about the pro blems of second-generation war-victims. (Was I the very first case?) Years before, 1 had adapted my dad's war experiences as my very own. This wasn't very difficult, every week he told of his time in captivity. Friday-evenings were kept open for this purpose. He always began to recant after our Roman-Catholic meal of bread. When my brothers and I tucked in to the weekly treat, thick powdered, custard-rolls, he told of hunger and bombs. All those events that were important to him: his deportation to Germany in 1944, together with two brothers, his imprisonment and his escape, all things passed. Because of our age, he did not want to be too gloomy. Dennis the Menace and friends in Germany, that's what his stories added up to. All stories had a funny ending. My father and his brothers always out smarted the Germans. ("After you" my father would say to a German Officer, on leaving the camp-provi sion room. The German went first, allowing my dad to snatch a sausage from the hook, and stuff it down his pants.) As we grew older, the gist of his stories started to change. Slowly, there became space for real misery, such as the long hours of morning-roll call in the win ter cold. Or the painful beatings with rifle-butts during the daily walk to the trenches of Bentheim. It was in this period that I came to notice that my father was falling into repetitions. I didn't really mind it, but I did wonder whether Dad himself was aware of it. Or couldn't he be bothered, and just started 17 Zeeuws Tijdschrift 2004/6-7

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Zeeuws Tijdschrift | 2004 | | pagina 19