Go for the Kill

Tablet Magazine
Jan 7 2010

Go for the Kill

"The Foreskin’s Lament" author is at work on a new project: a comic
novel about genocide. Here’s the first installment of a regular column
about writing it.

By Shalom Auslander

For the past two years or so, I have been hard at work on a novel that
is finally nearing completion. It is a funny book about genocide.

Stay with me.

`There’s nothing funny about genocide,’ you say. That’s what I thought.

* * *

I’d been thinking about writing a book on genocide for some time, but
the project really kicked off about a year-and-a-half ago, around the
time my wife told me she was pregnant with our second child.
Naturally, I thought about the Holocaust. It wasn’t a morbid thought,
or at least it didn’t seem so to me. The thought was this: `At least
our first son will have someone to go to the concentration camps
with.’

Stay with me.

I was raised on a steady diet of Holocaust films, books, newsreels,
and stories. By `never again,’ it was clear that my teachers meant
`again.’ They meant, `Bet on it.’ They meant, `Hide some cigarettes in
your underpants, you can trade them for bread.’ They meant, `Hang on,
it’s going to be a bumpy landing.’

I am, it should be said, assimilated. That won’t help, I know. I know
that the Jews in Germany were similarly assimilated, that Germany was
the height of culture, and nobody thought it could happen. So despite
enjoying my flat-screen TV and cheeseburgers, I know it won’t make a
difference when the American Holocaust begins (or the Second American
Holocaust, if you count the Native American Holocaust, which nobody
does). I know that Hitler went back two generations to decide if
someone was a Jew, and I know that writers, journalists, and members
of `the media’ were among those who took their last showers first. And
so, despite having no real evidence of an impending Holocaust here in
America beyond Glenn Beck, Sean Hannity, the rise of the Birchers (and
Birthers) in conservative circles, far-left rage at bankers, mid-left
rage at capitalists, everyone’s rage at `the media,’ poor economic
conditions, rising unemployment, anger-fueled populism, and a growing
resentment of `others,’ I am still convinced that my son’and now my
sons’will die, at some point, in something resembling a genocide
(assuming that afterward the UN votes to deem it such, which they
won’t).

And so, as the doomed life within my wife began to grow, I started
reading about other genocides. I’m a fun guy. I read about the
Armenian Genocide, and about the Herrero Massacre, and about the
Holodomor, and about King Leopold in the Congo, and about the Tutsis
killing Hutus, and about the Hutus killing Tutsis. Somewhere in the
middle of Blood and Soil: A World History of Genocide and
Extermination from Sparta to Darfur, or maybe it was Century of
Genocide: Critical Essays and Eyewitness Accounts, or This Way for the
Gas, Ladies and Gentlemen, or Machete Season,’somewhere in the middle
of one of those, it all started to seem¦funny. Maybe I was just
forcing myself to find it funny. Maybe that was the only response I
could bear. Not that the killing or the gassing or the mutilation was
funny. Not the mass graves or the piles of bones or the body parts
torn off and kept as souvenirs. But the regularity with which the
killing and the gassing and the mutilation and the mass graves and the
piles of bones and the body parts torn off and kept as souvenirs
kept’keeps’happening. That we cry `never again,’ and it happens again.

And again.

And again.

Funny stuff.

I’m available for weddings and bar mitzvahs.

* * *

Brian is a fat dumpy turd who is going to get his ass kicked one day.
Not by me, because I’m almost 40, and he’s not yet eight. But he’s a
bully, and he’s been bullying my son, who is not yet five. I look at
Brian’almost half my height and damn near double my weight, his
barely-fitting XL `Transformers’ t-shirt covered with bits of cake and
ice cream, his fat little legs already starting to splay out in the
manner of the morbidly obese, the cursed beams of his insufficient
structure already too weak to cope with the oversized load they are
being asked to support, his hollow, heavy-lidded eyes blinking out at
the world in the sort of dumb, mouth-breathing incomprehension you see
in mall kids and SS men and Glenn Beck’and I think about the genocide
books I’ve been reading. They all wonder why. They all seem to think
there’s a reason, and that if they can identify that reason, these
horrible crimes will never happen again. The reason, they say, is
poverty. The reason is racism, the West, the East, religion, atheism,
capitalism, communism. But it isn’t.

The reason is Brian.

There is no reason for Brian. I’d like there to be. But there isn’t.
Brian just is. Brian happens. Is Brian going to lead Hutus to
slaughter Tutsis? I don’t know. Perhaps he’s not that ambitious. But
if Brian were a Hutu, Brian would hack a Tutsi, no question about it.
Brian would hack a lot of Tutsis. Brian would be the Hutu in that news
footage, dancing around the mangled corpse of a young Tutsi with his
bloody machete raised triumphantly overhead. Only fatter. And eating a
Twinkie.

`That fat little asshole,’ my wife said.

`Who?’ I asked.

`Brian.’

She had just come upstairs from tucking our son into bed, which was
when he told her what had happened. Brian had been teasing him on the
bus, poking him and trying to steal his GI Joe doll.

`That fat little asshole,’ she said again.

`Okay,’ I said, putting down The History of Torture and Execution from
Early Civilization Through Medieval Times to the Present. `Just calm
down.’

My wife is Middle Eastern; if you don’t stop the rock-throwing right
away, pretty soon you’re shutting down East Jerusalem. I reminded her
that our son has a vivid imagination, and that while something
probably did happen, we don’t know for certain exactly what it was,
and after all, this is Woodstock, it’s not like he was attacked by the
Crips, and eventually, by the way, he is going to have to learn to
fight his own battles.

`Okay,’ she said. `You’re right.’

My son began to cry. I went downstairs, sat on the edge of his bed,
and asked him what was wrong.

`I was having a bad dream.’

`What about, buddy?’

`About Brian.’

That fat little asshole, I thought.

`What about him, buddy?’

`We’re on the bus,’ he said, `and he’s picking on me and stealing my
toys and then the bus stops and it’s my turn to get off but he won’t
let me and the bus leaves and I can never get home.’

That fat little asshole.

I wanted to tell him that he didn’t need to worry, that there was a
man who lived a long time ago named Charles Darwin, and that Darwin
figured out that we all evolved from monkeys and apes, and that some
of us are more evolved, and some of us are less evolved, and some of
us’the Brians of the world’have actually devolved somehow into
something less than apes. But I heard my shrink in my head, telling me
that all your children need to know is that you love them, and will
always love them, and that’s all that matters. And so I told my son
that I love him, and that I would always love him, and that was all
that mattered. I may have mentioned something about the fact that if
Brian ever touched him again, I would cut him up into tiny bits, stick
them on skewers, put him on the grill until he was all cooked up, and
then feed him to the dogs. And that I really, really love him.

My son laughed.

`Will you mash him up into peanut butter and put him on a sandwich?’

I laughed and said I would.

`Will you drop him off a building and drop a piano on his head.’

He’s been watching a lot of Bugs Bunny lately.

`Will you¦’

`Okay, buddy, it’s time to get some sleep.’

`Okay. I love you, Dad.’

`I love you, buddy.’

I went upstairs.

`That fat little asshole,’ I said to my wife.

I picked up my History of Torture and Execution, and forced myself
again to find the humor in it. Because it seems for some things’like
the seemingly-genetic, obviously-incurable bestiality of man toward
his fellow man’laughter isn’t the best medicine.

It’s the only goddamn medicine.

ion/23198/go-for-the-kill/

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.tabletmag.com/life-and-relig

Emil Lazarian

“I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS