When We Shovel A Grave Into Winds Where We Lie Unfined

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Paul Celan is perhaps the greatest German poet in the twentieth century. He was born in Chermivsi, Ukraine in 1920. He grew up in an educated German-speaking Jewish family. He studied medicine at the age of 18 in France, but left early when the German occupied Austria in 1938. He then changed his course of study to learn Romance languages. When the danger spread all over Europe, he tried to warn his family, but it was too late for them to escape the eminent evil of the Nazi regime. He then was enlisted to serve in a labor camp and miraculously survived, however his parents couldn’t survive. Paul was liberated in 1944 and he wrote his masterpiece Death Fugue later at the end of this year. The poem is considered one of very few poems that received …show more content…

Indeed, there are quite a few other examples throughout the poem that suggest such thing. In each case, I fill out the directed ambiguity with their individual interpretive view of the poem's context. For example, “we shovel a grave into winds where we lie unconfined” shows the natural disruption order of life that is lost during the war. Such mind-blowing image shows how the world has become where death is not only unceremoniously buried in conventional graves in the ground, but also above in the winds, a call of disturbance in the order of nature. The souls of those innocent prisoners crave for a peaceful death where they imagine their graves dug up in the wind. This is perhaps a reference to mass graves that the Nazis made stretching for long miles. To prisoners, they see the ground is full of cadavers that they could not any longer or alluding to the fact that many Jews were cremated during the Holocaust in which the hair of Shulamith later turned to ash. It is true that the Nazis stripped the Jews from the right of having proper Jewish burial. The Nazis see more convenient to burn their bodies in crematoriums where the victims’ remains scatter in the

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