Non­fic­tion

Vera Gran: The Accused

Aga­ta Tuszyńs­ka; Charles Ruas, trans.
  • Review
By – March 22, 2013

In the spring of 2003, Aga­ta Tuszyńs­ka stood on the thresh­old of a dark Paris apart­ment. After weeks of nego­ti­a­tion she had per­suad­ed 87-year-old Vera Gran to tell her sto­ry. Defen­sive, inter­mit­tent­ly para­noid, iso­lat­ed, hav­ing no nation­al­i­ty” in the words of her French res­i­den­cy card, Gran had with­drawn from the world and lived sur­round­ed by pub­lic­i­ty pho­tos and posters, evi­dence of her exot­ic beau­ty and her notable inter­na­tion­al singing career that began in War­saw in the 1930s. But over Gran’s post­war career, despite many suc­cess­es, hung the accu­sa­tion that she had been a Nazi col­lab­o­ra­tor. Gran’s accom­pa­nist in the War­saw ghet­to, Władysław Szpil­man, was enshrined in the film The Pianist. Gran, although cleared of the charges of col­lab­o­ra­tion, was hound­ed by accusers wher­ev­er she appeared and fought the accu­sa­tion her entire life. It is this sto­ry that Tuszyńs­ka, Pol­ish poet and author, tells after spend­ing Gran’s final years with her.

Gran lived in a dust-cov­ered apart­ment filled with the records of her life — her appeals to var­i­ous author­i­ties, her pri­vate­ly pub­lished auto­bi­og­ra­phy, her let­ters. But behind Gran’s mem­o­ries, doc­u­ments, and writ­ings are the con­flict­ing mem­o­ries, doc­u­ments, and writ­ings of oth­er sur­vivors of the War­saw ghet­to and offi­cial records of court pro­ceed­ings. In nav­i­gat­ing the sto­ry of Gran’s life, Tuszyńs­ka inter­viewed the sur­vivors who knew Gran in the ghet­to, exam­ined Gran’s papers and cor­re­spon­dence, stud­ied court records. The mem­o­ries of some peo­ple changed over time; some were still bit­ter, some had soft­ened their views. As Tuszyńs­ka searched what­ev­er leads she found, she found that the truth was illu­so­ry, that one person’s truth was not nec­es­sar­i­ly anoth­er person’s truth. Szpil­man would not work with Gran after the war because he heard she was a col­lab­o­ra­tor; she main­tained he fin­gered Jews to be trans­port­ed to the camps.

As Tuszyńs­ka sifts through the evi­dence and con­ver­sa­tions with sur­vivors, she stops and steps out­side Gran’s sto­ry to ask both her­self and the read­er what con­sti­tutes jus­ti­fi­able acts of sur­vival, what con­sti­tutes col­lab­o­ra­tion, where does the truth lie. These are ques­tions that can­not be answered by what she has heard and has learned, but for Gran these were not viable ques­tions. Through­out her life — in the ghet­to and in the years before and after — Vera Gran was a per­former, a per­former to sup­port her fam­i­ly in the ghet­to, a per­former to earn her liv­ing, a per­former to feel alive. From the many hours spent with Vera Gran, Tuszyńs­ka does, how­ev­er, ascer­tain one truth: for those who were touched by the hor­rors of this war, the war nev­er ended.

In seek­ing out Vera Gran, Tuszyńs­ka says she did not intend to write a biog­ra­phy, and she nev­er explains what she calls her obses­sion with Vera Gran’s fate or resolve Gran’s own obses­sion with clear­ing her name. But she leaves with the read­er painful and lin­ger­ing ques­tions that force on her or him the dif­fi­cul­ty of deter­min­ing some­one else’s truth. Photographs.

Maron L. Wax­man, retired edi­to­r­i­al direc­tor, spe­cial projects, at the Amer­i­can Muse­um of Nat­ur­al His­to­ry, was also an edi­to­r­i­al direc­tor at Harper­Collins and Book-of-the-Month Club.

Discussion Questions