PUNCTUATED BY LIFE AND DEATH
By Richard Cohen
Washington Post
Oct 10 2006
On the day that The Post carried a story about how President Bush had
characterized the present difficult period in Iraq as "just a comma,"
Matt Mendelsohn called me. He is a photographer who took the pictures
for a new book by his brother Daniel, "The Lost." It is an attempt
to find out what happened to six members of the Mendelsohn family who
perished in the Holocaust -- the family of great-uncle Shmiel Jager,
"killed by the Nazis," of which almost nothing else was known. There:
You went right by it. Shmiel lived between the commas.
In between those commas, of course, is the life of a man. He was
scared and he was brave, he was proud and he was shamed, he headed a
family and ran a business and then hid from the Nazis until he, along
with four daughters and his wife, was betrayed and shot right on the
spot. Don't think of the bullet as a period. It was, worse, a comma.
So Daniel Mendelsohn set out to expand the commas, to push them
open and let in a life. From what the reviewers say, he succeeded
brilliantly, so when someone says that 6 million Jews died in the
Holocaust or if someone mentions Auschwitz, you can understand that
it is not a number that died but a person who was murdered. I say
that also about Rwanda in 1994, or what happened to the Armenians in
Turkey in 1915, or what is happening in Darfur today.
Commas imprison us all. You see them in the headlines of obituaries:
Joseph Smith, accountant, 81; Mildred Jones, housewife, 87; Frank
Miller, longtime resident, dies. The brevity of it all, the compression
of a life into a clause, is appalling, yet an unalterable fact. This
is the way not just of newspapers but of history, too. You come across
the mention of a war -- the Crimean, the Civil, the Vietnam, the Boer,
the Algerian -- and then, like a cemetery dangling from two commas,
comes a mention of the number of dead. They get the same prominence
-- sometimes less -- as the amount of ordnance used or ships sunk or
airplanes built.
Wars are fought with commas. They are essential. Here and there is
a world leader who does not care about human life, but most do. The
only way they can function is to plant commas around the misery they
cause, to subordinate the loss of life to a supposedly greater cause.
This is what Bush is doing. If he did not think he is on his way to
something grand, that he is doing immense good, then he could not face
what is between those two commas -- almost 3,000 American lives and
immense suffering. He is not a man given to introspection. Still,
he could not live without the succor of cliches: breaking eggs to
make an omelet and all of that. In between his commas are all those
broken eggs. As yet, there is no omelet.
Not too long ago, I embraced the commas myself. I favored this idiotic
war because I thought that the deaths of some would improve -- even
save -- the lives of many. I likened the about-to-die soldiers to
firemen or cops, the people we summon to risk or lose their lives
for the common good. I had the common good in mind when I supported
the war, and I did not expect much space between the commas. Now,
the space expands and expands, one comma marching away from the
other. It seems we will need room for all of Iraq.
When he was alive, I didn't much care for Menachem Begin, the
hard-line Israeli prime minister. But when he retired after the 1982
war in Lebanon and showed his grief, my view of him changed. He was
despondent over all the lives wasted, and he went into seclusion. For
Begin, somehow, the commas evaporated and the immensity of his mistake
pitched him into a depression relieved only by death. Other world
leaders, in similar circumstances, join consulting firms. The bigger
their mistakes, it appears, the higher their fees.
Most of us yearn to escape our commas, to become something more
than a profession (longtime lawyer) or resident (Washington native),
to make our mark on the world. A president who has ineptly waged a
foolish war instead seeks the solace of commas. It is not so much
where he has deposited the wounded and dead but where he hopes he can
hide from history. It can't be done, though: George W. Bush comma --
and then his failure in Iraq. The comma is his epitaph.
[email protected]
By Richard Cohen
Washington Post
Oct 10 2006
On the day that The Post carried a story about how President Bush had
characterized the present difficult period in Iraq as "just a comma,"
Matt Mendelsohn called me. He is a photographer who took the pictures
for a new book by his brother Daniel, "The Lost." It is an attempt
to find out what happened to six members of the Mendelsohn family who
perished in the Holocaust -- the family of great-uncle Shmiel Jager,
"killed by the Nazis," of which almost nothing else was known. There:
You went right by it. Shmiel lived between the commas.
In between those commas, of course, is the life of a man. He was
scared and he was brave, he was proud and he was shamed, he headed a
family and ran a business and then hid from the Nazis until he, along
with four daughters and his wife, was betrayed and shot right on the
spot. Don't think of the bullet as a period. It was, worse, a comma.
So Daniel Mendelsohn set out to expand the commas, to push them
open and let in a life. From what the reviewers say, he succeeded
brilliantly, so when someone says that 6 million Jews died in the
Holocaust or if someone mentions Auschwitz, you can understand that
it is not a number that died but a person who was murdered. I say
that also about Rwanda in 1994, or what happened to the Armenians in
Turkey in 1915, or what is happening in Darfur today.
Commas imprison us all. You see them in the headlines of obituaries:
Joseph Smith, accountant, 81; Mildred Jones, housewife, 87; Frank
Miller, longtime resident, dies. The brevity of it all, the compression
of a life into a clause, is appalling, yet an unalterable fact. This
is the way not just of newspapers but of history, too. You come across
the mention of a war -- the Crimean, the Civil, the Vietnam, the Boer,
the Algerian -- and then, like a cemetery dangling from two commas,
comes a mention of the number of dead. They get the same prominence
-- sometimes less -- as the amount of ordnance used or ships sunk or
airplanes built.
Wars are fought with commas. They are essential. Here and there is
a world leader who does not care about human life, but most do. The
only way they can function is to plant commas around the misery they
cause, to subordinate the loss of life to a supposedly greater cause.
This is what Bush is doing. If he did not think he is on his way to
something grand, that he is doing immense good, then he could not face
what is between those two commas -- almost 3,000 American lives and
immense suffering. He is not a man given to introspection. Still,
he could not live without the succor of cliches: breaking eggs to
make an omelet and all of that. In between his commas are all those
broken eggs. As yet, there is no omelet.
Not too long ago, I embraced the commas myself. I favored this idiotic
war because I thought that the deaths of some would improve -- even
save -- the lives of many. I likened the about-to-die soldiers to
firemen or cops, the people we summon to risk or lose their lives
for the common good. I had the common good in mind when I supported
the war, and I did not expect much space between the commas. Now,
the space expands and expands, one comma marching away from the
other. It seems we will need room for all of Iraq.
When he was alive, I didn't much care for Menachem Begin, the
hard-line Israeli prime minister. But when he retired after the 1982
war in Lebanon and showed his grief, my view of him changed. He was
despondent over all the lives wasted, and he went into seclusion. For
Begin, somehow, the commas evaporated and the immensity of his mistake
pitched him into a depression relieved only by death. Other world
leaders, in similar circumstances, join consulting firms. The bigger
their mistakes, it appears, the higher their fees.
Most of us yearn to escape our commas, to become something more
than a profession (longtime lawyer) or resident (Washington native),
to make our mark on the world. A president who has ineptly waged a
foolish war instead seeks the solace of commas. It is not so much
where he has deposited the wounded and dead but where he hopes he can
hide from history. It can't be done, though: George W. Bush comma --
and then his failure in Iraq. The comma is his epitaph.
[email protected]