Page 24 - Unlikely Stories 1
P. 24

Madagascar Madness



        performer on—how many?—several continents. From that peak, the
        seeker  has  nowhere  to  go  but  death  or  a  return  to  the  world  as a
        healer or teacher. The people here respect a shaman, particularly one
        who can establish contact with venerated ancestors. I was planning to
        use elements of the old spiritualist acts to cover real applications of
        the powers I had mastered. The war, however, forced me to make a
        difficult choice. I don’t think it is well-known outside of Germany,
        but the Nazis were looking for a way to deport the Jews of Europe to
        another country in the Thirties.”
          “No, I never knew that. If it wasn’t in the newspapers or on the
        radio when I was a kid, then I wouldn’t have heard about it.”
          “Well, word of it reached this place without benefit of those organs
        of  officially-sanctioned  information,  primarily  because  Madagascar
        was one of the proposed recipients of that vast Jewish population.
        Apparently the Zionists themselves, as well as the anti-Semites, had
        been searching for such a solution to the failure of most European
        countries  to  integrate  their  Jewish  inhabitants—I  cannot  say,
        citizens—into  societies  too  easily  swayed  by  ethnic  rivalry  and
        scapegoating by religious and political leaders. And the Jews who had
        been successful were often wealthy: thus the transport of millions of
        men, women and children to some distant exile could be financed by
        confiscating their property. In 1940 France was defeated, her colonies
        controlled  by Vichy,  and the Madagascar Plan reached the  desk  of
        high Nazi officials in Berlin.”
          Seidell’s eyes widened. “Wow!”
          “Indeed, my friend: ‘wow!’” Weiss managed a wan smile. “Would it
        have worked? Could the transplantation of European Jewry to this
        backward  island  have  been  the  answer,  a  new  beginning  for  an
        ancient people? Would they have used their skills and intelligence to
        transform  Madagascar  into  a  modern  nation,  integrating  with  the
        local population in a partnership of self-interest? We’ll never know,
        because in 1942, Britain fought a naval battle here, landed troops and
        defeated Vichy. The Free French took over, and the Madagascar Plan
        was  abandoned.  News  from  Europe  became  spotty—but  now  you
        have  confirmed  the  result:  instead  of  transporting  Jews  they

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