Paromita’s Reviews > The Village on the Edge of the World: Writing and Surviving in Ceausescu's Romania > Status Update
Paromita
is on page 161 of 256
How helpless we are before a grave. I have never understood people who visit graveyards as though they were parks....Every graveyard is haunting to me, because I always imagine the dead people who are under the earth. I can’t think it away. I’m not in a garden or a park. I know that I am literally walking over dead bodies – not as a figure of speech, but in actuality.
— Jul 12, 2026 09:38AM
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Paromita
is on page 238 of 256
Sometimes my cabinets with all these drawers seem to me like a train station, and I ask myself whether the words would like to set off for the text I’m working on, or would prefer to wait for some future, unforeseeable text. I also don’t know whether they feel locked up inside the drawer, or whether they feel protected.
— Jul 12, 2026 10:24AM
Paromita
is on page 238 of 256
I feel I am lucky to own hundreds of thousands of words. And when I am travelling, I often think of the fact that the words are waiting for me at home. The fact that they are allowed to lie around in the open is an expression of ease, of personal freedom. For my abundant ownership of words is the opposite of the past, the opposite of censorship.
— Jul 12, 2026 10:23AM
Paromita
is on page 230 of 256
The emergencies, the contingencies, the congruencies are entirely different with cut-out words compared to ordinary writing. Even after more than twenty years of producing collages, they still astonish me. To this day, I still don’t know what disposition is concealed within each word. This is only revealed when they come together in new ways.
— Jul 12, 2026 10:19AM
Paromita
is on page 228 of 256
I understood then that damage is an intimate connection.
— Jul 12, 2026 10:17AM
Paromita
is on page 228 of 256
I saw Harald Jung’s portrait of Jorge Semprún: In the film, Semprún visits Buchenwald concentration camp, where he was as a young man. And during his visit, he walks across the site and is so relieved that Jung is surprised by him. Semprún says simply that he has come home. It was the same with Oskar Pastior. It was trauma. Something that buries itself so deep inside your body that it destroys and enchants you.
— Jul 12, 2026 10:17AM
Paromita
is on page 217 of 256
Only with time did I learn that the effects of deportation are insidious – as cruel and intimate as hunger itself. Aside from the body’s torment, the damage also takes the shape of an addiction. One dreads the camp, while developing a homesickness for it. And it consumes the survivor. It continues to humiliate him long after he has escaped, because it enchants him against his will.
— Jul 12, 2026 10:12AM
Paromita
is on page 212 of 256
I had to ask myself whether recollection has more to do with a person’s memory or with their disposition. Or whether it is solely how one perceives an experience at the time that determines what one will remember and what one will forget later on.
— Jul 12, 2026 10:10AM
Paromita
is on page 210 of 256
Above all, I was interested in the seemingly unimportant, the inconspicuous. I wanted a personal description of the camp, from an individual, to capture its so-called ‘everyday life’.
— Jul 12, 2026 10:09AM

