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Theatre

It's Auschwitz the opera

This week at English National Opera, a remarkable opera was unveiled for the first time in the UK.

September 22, 2011 10:30
Inmates are ordered to display the camp numbers tattooed on their arms in the ENO's production of The Passenger

By

Jessica Duchen,

Jessica Duchen

4 min read

This week at English National Opera, a remarkable opera was unveiled for the first time in the UK. The Passenger, written in 1968 by the Polish-Jewish composer Mieczyslaw Weinberg, was once praised by Dmitri Shostakovich as a masterpiece, but lay unstaged until last year. It is based on a novel by the Polish writer Zofia Posmysz, in turn based on her experiences as a prisoner in Auschwitz.

Posmysz, who is 88, is exceptionally open about her experiences; writing about Auschwitz, first as a play and then as the book in the early 1960s, seems to have proved strongly cathartic. The story explores the strange relationship between two young women in the camp - a prisoner and the overseer for whom she works. Despite the grim events it relates, the message of The Passenger is one of profound compassion. Extraordinarily, instead of giving a direct account of her three years in Auschwitz, Posmysz chose instead to think herself into the mind of her enemy, whose real name was Anneliese Franz, and find the humanity within.

At the opera's start, a German couple, Lisa and Walther, are sailing to Brazil. On the boat, Lisa glimpses a woman whom she had believed dead. In shock, she tells her husband for the first time that she was once an overseer at Auschwitz. Her memories of the camp and of the mysterious passenger, Marta, are played out in the lower half of the split stage.

Posmysz, a devout Catholic, was arrested and sent to Auschwitz for possessing leaflets relating to Polish underground schools. "The first six months were the hardest," she recalls. She was forced to undertake hard labour in freezing conditions. Her intense faith sustained her - "I was convinced that I could not die in Auschwitz" - and then came an intervention which took her indoors out of the cold to serve as a bookkeeper for Franz.

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