Read Beat (...and repeat)
The Nazi occupation of Paris during World War II brought hardship to many, especially if they were Jewish. As German rule tightened, Jewish families were at risk of being rounded up and sent to concentration camps like Auschwitz. The Courtyard is an account of one Jewish family that survived the war thanks to the assistance of brave neighbors and a miracle or two along the way, said Morris, whose father-in law was Ben Parket. Morris said the book came about through her collaboration with Parket, who turns 93 this summer. Before war broke out, the Parkets—Ben, his parents, and two older brothers—lived in a tiny but sunny fourth-floor apartment that overlooked a large, open courtyard, a busy place in the heart of Paris, a center of industry, she said. “The neighborhood was known for woodworking with furniture makers, upholsterers, and painters busy at their trade. Ben’s father, Joseph, was a varnisher who had his workshop in the same courtyard,” said Morris. In August of 1941, Joseph Parket was arrested along with other Jewish men who had immigrated from Eastern Europe. He was detained in a camp outside Paris that would become the primary French gateway to Auschwitz. The first of the miracles occurred when Joseph was released due to illness and sent home in November. “During the entire war, only 800 of the 70,000 people detained at the camp were ever released,” noted Morris. Ben’s father came home and recovered, but in July of 1942, the entire family was marked for arrest. Luckily, a courtyard neighbor who worked at the police station warned the Parket family in advance. The family wound up staying in an empty warehouse nearby. They made do in a single room the size of a one-car garage for two years without electricity, plumbing, or running water. At night, they had to be completely silent. “Protecting the family was a true community effort,” said Morris. Neighboring shopkeepers—a grocer and a deli owner—set aside food for the family each day, food that nine-year-old Ben had to go and collect each day, a task that "should have been terrifying, but Ben said it wasn’t. Perhaps because it was his only time outside, it became his favorite part of the day,” she said. After the war, the Parket family emigrated to Israel before Ben, on his own, traveled to the United States for college. He attended Stanford University and settled in the Bay Area. He was an architect until he retired in his 50s. Perhaps because of the time he spent hiding during the war, Ben developed a passion for the outdoors, said Morris, noting that he remains an avid biker and hiker to this day.
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