The Girl Who Still Looks Back
The photograph was never supposed to outlive the people who ordered it taken. It was made as a record, another number, a prisoner, a child swallowed by a machine built to forget that children were children. Yet there she remains. Fourteen years old. Her hair hastily brushed back. A bruise darkening her lip where cruelty had left its fingerprint only moments before. Her eyes are the first thing anyone notices. They don't accuse or plead. They search. And seem to be looking for someone who ought to be there, a mother who had already been taken from her, a familiar voice speaking Polish instead of German, a world that still made sense. Every generation since has looked back into those eyes and found itself unable to look away. Before the striped uniform and the number stitched to cloth and the camera clicked inside Auschwitz, she had been only a little girl in Poland. She would have known mornings scented with bread and wood smoke, fields where summer insects stitched invisible songs ...