Last week NPR reported a story
that really reached out to me. You may recall an earlier story of how staff at the
Auschwitz museum discovered two pieces of jewelry hidden in the false
bottom of an enamel mug. The original owner—one of hundreds of thousands to
pass through the work-and-death camp—is unknown, so the narrative surrounding the
mug, the ring and the necklace remains ephemeral and very sad.
But that report sparked a
listener to contact NPR with a similar story from her own family history. You
can read it here,
but the condensed version is that when the German army began the invasion of
Poland in 1939, a Jewish couple in Warsaw, Guta and Meyer Rak, took precautions
against the presumed chaotic future. They took their gold jewelry to a goldsmith
and asked him to melt it down and hide it in the lip of an ordinary tin tea canister.
When they picked it up some
time later, of course there was no way of knowing whether the goldsmith had
done what he’d been paid for, because the whole point was that the precious
metal be completely hidden. He could well just have kept the gold as well as
their payment, lined the tin with more base metal and handed that over; after
all—even if they did discover deceit, what could they do about it? The Raks
took the canister with them as they fled to the East, and it stayed with them
through years in Soviet labor camps, and more years of travel until they
settled in the Bronx.
They never attempted to
retrieve the gold—they always managed with what was visible, without having to
dip into their secret reserve—so they lived their long lives without knowing
whether their reserve still existed. It took them decades before they even told
their daughter what the rusty old tea canister represented.
But when their granddaughter
was planning her wedding, she decided to use whatever metal the tin contained
for her wedding rings. She found a jeweler who likes a challenge, and he made a
special tool to pull out the lining around the lip that would cause minimal
damage to the canister.
And he found gold.
The Warsaw goldsmith had not
taken advantage of the dark times to cheat customers he would never see again.
And he’d done a masterful job using lead to solder the gold securely to tin—apparently
a tricky balance.
The Raks kept their battered
old canister with them for 70 years, trusting that, whatever came along, they
could always pull out something extra from the can if it was needed to get them
to better times. But they managed without ever needing it.
And their granddaughter and
her husband wear daily reminders of that story of honor, trust, hope and
resilience.
I am grateful that this story
has come to light to remind us that such precious metals are possible, even in
the basest of times.
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