My
mother’s friend Lixie died last month. Eight months ago, her husband (my
father) died. And just about exactly a year ago, my mother’s friend Walter
died.
The
three of them were all in their 90’s: Lixie died 6 weeks after turning 92; my
father also died 6 weeks after turning 92; Walter died 6
weeks before he would have been 92. My mother, who still lives independently
though she is not as vigorous as she was a few years ago, reached age 91 in December.
They had
something else in common: all three were born in Germany or Austria in the
1920s and left thanks to the efforts of a group of Belgian Jewish women who sought
to rescue Jewish children from an uncertain fate. The group of 93 children
stayed in Brussels until the Germans invaded Belgium. They then made their way
to unoccupied France, where they found refuge until 1942, when France no longer
provided a safe haven for them. My parents escaped individually to Switzerland
and eventually, well after the end of the war, made their way to the US. Lixie
remained in hiding in France until the end of the war. Walter was one of the
few teenagers to manage to immigrate to the US during the war. The story of the
“Children of La Hille” is told by Walter in a book published shortly before his death; I tell parts of the story in my
memoir about my parents, Once They Had a Country.
Of the
93 children in the original group that made their way to Brussels, 82 survived the war. And of those 82, many are
living into their nineties. In addition to the four I mentioned above—my mother
and the three who died within the past year—I know of another three who are
alive and over ninety. There may be more. Surely this is more than one would
expect in a cohort of people born in Europe in the mid-1920s.
Curious,
I looked at what is known about the longevity of Jews who survived the trauma
of 1939-1945 in Europe. And what I found was very interesting indeed. An
article called Against All Odds found that survivors of “genocidal trauma”
during World War II were likely to live longer than a comparable group not
exposed to the same trauma.
The study looked at Israelis born in Poland who
were between 4 and 20 years of age in 1939. They compared those who came to
Israel before 1939 with those who arrived between 1945 and 1950, defining as "Holocaust
survivors" anyone who spent the war years in Europe, regardless
of whether they were in a concentration camp, hiding in a convent, or on the
run. The justification for this broad definition is that in all cases, their lives were in extreme jeopardy.
The authors of the study examined at the experience of 41,454 Holocaust survivors and 13,766 controls. What they
found was that Holocaust survivors were on average likely to live 6.5 months
longer than those who were not in Europe during World War II. This despite
ample prior evidence that Jews who spent some or all of the war years in Europe
had a high rate of post-traumatic stress disorder in later life.
What
does this mean? It’s not certain what it means, but one possibility is
that whatever factors led this high risk group to survive under adversity also
led them to survive into old age. And since there’s no reason to believe that
just because you were lucky once, you’ll be lucky again, I suspect that a key
factor is genes. Those Jewish children who managed to survive the war, including the Children of La Hille (who, because of the assistance they received, faced better odds than their counterparts who were not part of this group), were better equipped to endure. That
capacity continued to help them for the remainder of their lives.
This
explanation is, of course, entirely speculative. It’s conceivable that the longevity of
the Children of La Hille is simply due to chance. But I am telling this story
because it is a reminder that much of the experience of aging is shaped to a large extent by
factors beyond our control—by luck and genes.
This doesn’t mean we shouldn’t try
to improve our chances of survival by preventing whatever part of illness and disability is
preventable. It doesn’t mean we shouldn’t do what we can by exercising and
eating a good diet, by avoiding drugs and alcohol, and by controlling
conditions such as high blood pressure. But let’s have the humility to remember
that we have only a modest ability to determine our fate. All those who, unlike the Children of La Hille, don't have good luck and good genes, should nonetheless have access to
the medical care, housing, and social services that allow them to have as good
a quality of life as possible, however many years they live.
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