Showing posts with label commemoration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label commemoration. Show all posts

Monday, January 27, 2014

Survivor testimony available ONLINE!!!

Top: Dora Edelbaum, Leo Zemelman, Clara Grossman. Bottom: Otto Schick, Mina Nisenkier, Alegra Tevet.

Today is International Holocaust Remembrance Day - a day designated by the United Nations and scheduled to coincide with the anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz. In recognition of this commemoration, today we are pleased to announce a year-long initiative to make our local survivor testimony available online!

This month we feature six survivors who experienced Auschwitz - Dora Edelbaum, Leo Zemelman, Clara Grossman, Otto Schick, Mina Nisenkier, and Alegra Tevet.

http://www.mchekc.org/survivors

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Carolyn H. Manosevits Mixes Media and a Powerful Healing Message


“I am passionate about keeping alive the culture, tradition and memory of the destroyed shtetls (small Jewish communities) of Europe.  My art is my vehicle” Carolyn Manosevitz quotes in a recent catalogue of work devoted to her personal experiences of loss.  As a part of a long healing process, in 2003, the artist traveled to Kremenets, her family’s Jewish community in the Ukraine.  She admits that the journey was “a life-changing experience that brought closure to the great loss of my family.” A child of immigrants to Winnepeg, Canada, her artwork tells the story of efforts to work through personal and familial pain suffered because of the destruction of her loved ones by the Nazis during the Holocaust.

 
Manosevits is an artist, educator, and Holocaust scholar who helped organize this June’s symposium: Responsibility of World Religions in the Age of Genocide, in Aspen, Colorado.  Several of her original works of art were exhibited during the opening reception, where she spoke briefly about her mixed media processes and the healing odyssey that lead to this point in her life.  Individual papers, talks, and panels all addressed issues that are so beautifully echoed in Carolyn Manosevits’ artwork: the power of one individual’s story, our commitment to family and faith, the complex and multi-layered journey through healing, recovering memory, reconciliation, and how incredibly destructive the act of “other-izing” can be. 

Carolyn’s mixed media and fiber assemblage, “Children of Abraham,” features an intricate, pencil drawing of a tree.  Its trunk splits into two main branches, and one of these splits again into two more massive limbs.  The tree itself, though drawn naturalistically, upon closer examination reveals subtly flexing twigs that evoke veins, arteries and capillaries.  From one of the three central limbs dangles a delicate, white paper square with a Star of David drawn on it. The other limb of the pair sports a similarly fashioned card featuring a miniature cross. From the adjacent branch hangs an Islamic crescent moon and star. The three tiny symbol cards, identical in size, quiver, casting their ever-changing micro-shadows and reminding us of the sometimes-tenuous nature of our faith journeys.  Like the symposium itself, this image speaks to the differences in each religion’s traditions, but also shows what is shared:  foundationally similar values, the strength of generational network, and the power of community; all springing forth from and anchored in, a solid sameness and truth.  Humanity is declared and celebrated. Across centuries, and down into the time of the soul of the earth, the roots reach while the limbs intertwine and stretch upward, seeking.

The tree dwarfs a hand-rendered tent that is similarly grounded, offering sanctuary. It is flanked with fabric of red and white contrasting stripes and is tethered to the earth with a chord that goes off the bottom of the picture plane, trusting the same subterranean truths in which the tree is routed. One flap suggests openness and invitation with a tilt of perspective allowing simultaneous views of different sides of the man-made structure. Extending out several inches and above, over the top of the entire composition, Carolyn has draped an amber, fibrous firmament made up of thousands of tiny, interwoven, glistening threads in a remnant that is both unraveling and protecting.  It also provides sanctuary; shielding, sheltering, shadowing, and gently inviting the viewer back down into the tent, perhaps a nod to our civilizing, organizing nature or our reliance on the temporary. The tether leads our eyes further downward and then the trunk gently coax us on a journey back up again, toward the vitality and promise of the tiny branches, reaching outward, once again, in a seamless cycle. The metaphor is at once optimistic, reassuring, and profound. 

Plexiglas shadowboxes spotlight most of Carolyn’s intimate pieces, none greater than 30 inches in any one dimension.  The hand-maid wonderscapes invite us in for adventures of exploration and discovery.  Incredibly tactile, the sensitively crafted scenes scream to be touched and have a Lilliputian charm that makes the viewer want to hit the “shrink” button and travel through them, looking around in all directions.  “Reconstructing the story” is a trio (I, II, III, IV) mixing paint, colored pencil, sculpted papers, collage bits, and hand-written text as well as color-tinted and sepia toned photographs painstakingly layered among gauzy netting-like fibers. Framing edges, pathways, and marks deliberately etched into layers of pigment, all reflect the immutability of fate, witnessing to a conflict and struggling; to remember, to leave a mark, to declare “they were once alive, they were here – hold them, keep them, they are members and need to be RE-membered.” 

“We who are the remnants” and “My children’s children” are similarly crafted with photographic portraits embedded in pigment. The imagery in both evokes kaddish, the Jewish prayers children say for their parents after death.  The subtle coloration of what appear to be family photos, groupings of loved ones, blending in with their richly textured backgrounds, allows a hiding, a fading, and a temporal aspect of release, of bidding farewell.  Into the fields they disappear.  Into the past they drift.  Leaving is not fleeing and is not by choice. It is not a march, a trot, or even a trudge: it is a slow melt. It is the disappearance of a single photographic frame, and the profound loss that renders the victims frozen in the reel of eternal time, which, in turn, is forever altered by their absence. Foreground gives way to background where pathways, arches, and figures simultaneously beckon and block the viewer.  Arms interlock, and shapes around community members morph to suggest spirits accompanying them on their journey, becoming nearly tangible forces; vital, organic, leading.

Some of Ms. Manosevits’ images seem more narrative than others.  “Krefelder Juden: for Emma” presents a topsy-turvey, slice-of-time world of mostly gray, and unanswered questions. Hints of saffron, violet and sage green function to merely highlight small bits of the primarily black and white composition:  a slightly greened barrier or fence in the foreground, a purplish dress and shadow in the middle ground accompanied by golden-tinted, flying window panes.  Perspective is deliberately unsettling, swinging different planes of chaos at the viewer behind the collaged photograph of a woman glancing down, introspective.  Is she Emma?  Or is someone seeking an already missing Emma? “Juden”: the Jews – are they gone? Are they being mourned, remembered? In the top half of the composition, an ominous maelstrom of cacophonous marks swirl – bits of text; some indistinguishable but deliberate forms, repetitive parallel marks suggesting architecture or industry; a net-like structure; and tiny bits of black and white, all disturbed by a conflagration of smoke, jagged edges, and flecks that appears to be in motion. Are they ashes? Is this the crematorium out in the country, the side of a building in a burning city, or a symbol of our civilizing instincts sinking in a tidal wave of terror? Is this the future, for Emma?  Or a memory of the past, locked in.  Are we being shown a death camp, a death march into oblivion, stone-cold fear, extreme despair?.  Even if you did not know the context of these pieces, or the translation of the word Juden; heavy, aching ambiguity and torn emotions blanket the work. Fury and frenzy permeate portions of the composition, vying for our attention; with the pensive sensitive portrait at the bottom, trapped, and the whirling dervish above; uncertainty hovers, a cyclone of destruction looms.

In contrast, “Echo” is easy on the eye and one of the pieces that holds together well, visually.  There is harmony and balance, even amidst the darkness and despair.  Several rectangles float and appear to lock into place, transforming disturbance into a resolution of sorts.  Again, multi-layers of fibers, papers, bits of collage and re-appropriated photographic imagery are treated with a working and re-working of pigments to render the final surface extraordinarily rich.  All of Carolyn’s work makes you want to look more, to see, and to think.  The pieces encourage contemplation and meditation.  They slow you down.  They are labors of a care, of tenderness and giving back.  We can feel optimism, reverence, and vitality even thought the subject matter evokes an incredible sadness at the loss of so much more than individuals.  Our civilizing has been compromised; it teeters perilously, yet there is hope.  “Seeking the Holy Spirit together” depicts a hand, reaching up into the light. Layering fibers into much of her work alludes to scripture about remnants; torn from the whole, separate, asunder. Including text hints at the power of expression and protest through letter and word, wisdom and book.  Tradition and values live even if people cannot. And of course the photographs themselves declare the power of collective and personal memory as well as the preciousness of each individual. In the catalogue, Rev. Dieter Heinzl shares, “Carolyn is a Holocaust scholar/artist with a passion and deep commitment to Tikkun Olam, the mending of the world. . . her teaching has broadened minds and opened hearts.” 

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Wall of Remembrance Quilt

One of my (and I think my students’) favorite culminating activities when we learn about the Holocaust is our Holocaust Remembrance Quilt. This is a collage of the kids’ artwork reflecting on what they have learned. Unavoidably, this is a tough, heavy and depressing topic for 8th graders. It’s nice to have something at the end that allows them to get their feelings out and be positive, if they want to. I give them all a handout with the directions, and a 4”x4” square drawn on it. In the square they simply have to draw, and write, if they wish, something that symbolizes the Holocaust to them. I give them the following guidelines:

  • Choose something that stuck with you during your study of the Holocaust.
  • It can be a design which commemorates an event or person.
  • It can be a hopeful design, looking toward the future.
  • It does not have to be sad. However, it should be reverent. It should in no way mock or make light of the Holocaust.
  • Please put some thought into it and make it personal to you.
  • You may draw or use a collage technique. However, it should not simply be a printout of a picture from the internet or clip art.
  • You will not be graded on how well you draw. Instead, you will be graded on the thoughtfulness and insight you put into the square.
  • This will be a culmination of the unit, so it should reflect your learning in the 3 weeks of study.
  • It may be in color or black and white, whatever you feel appropriate.
  • It may contain words as well as pictures, or be just a picture.
After they turn them in, I cut them all out. It’s important that they are as close to the exact same size as possible. Then I figure out how big to make the quilt. If I need more squares, I will put some of my favorite Holocaust quotes in. I also include a square with the year on it.

To assemble, I try to space them out so there is a good mix of color and black and white. I tape them on the back with Scotch tape to form the horizontal sections. Then I tape the horizontal sections together to form the quilt. I have found that it’s best to back it with construction paper. It holds up much better! Finally, I have it laminated and hang it in my room.

The kids find this very satisfying – to put what they learn and feel into a picture. The pictures run the gambit from amazingly detailed to simple. As with anything, there are kids who don’t do a stellar job, but when put together, they all look nice. I have all of the previous year’s hanging in my room, so the kids see the project all year and look forward to it. They also feel a sense of pride and legacy knowing I will keep theirs up for years to come as well.

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Poland publicly commemorates Holocaust victims

What is a monument? How do we remember? How do we honor? How do we proclaim that these people were once here, and they are no more? They lived, were a part of the rich tapestry that makes up this community, right here, and they are now gone. How do we show that? These are some of the questions that have motivated Polish community members to come together and memorialize victims of the Holocaust as individuals, to declare their personhood, cut short. 

The caption under Adam Galicia’s image of a building featuring sepia-toned, full, window-sized photographs of men, women, and children reads: “Holocaust remembrance advocates plastered images of Polish Jews on buildings in Warsaw that were part of the Jewish ghetto before WWII wiped them out.” Although this caption seems a little curt and almost cold, the image is stunning. With the choice of the word “plastered” as the verb, the sentence suggests an arbitrary thoughtlessness. In contemporary parlance, to “plaster” is to slap-dashedly affix with a cheap adhesive, without much previous thought to placement, or much concern for permanence. It’s a temporary announcement, like a bill board layer. This photo, on the other hand, suggests quite the contrary. It depicts lovely, larger-than-life portraits that have been carefully attached in seemingly “just right” places on the building’s surface. The placement of the photos flows with the structure of the building itself. Some pictures cover the bottom half of windows, suggesting the very power of story itself, behind the shades; evoking a time and place once rich with vitality, dignity, and love. The architecture literally frames the people because of the way the photos have been thoughtfully selected and arranged. And in turn, the people built the structure, not the literal building maybe, but the community itself. The installation of the photographs creates a monument that declares ‘there is a plan here.’ The end result creates a kind of beauty that is at once tender, dear, and chilling.

Most of the original photographs, which are reproduced and attached to the building, were taken in studios, by professional photographers, to record someone at his or her “best.” The photographers were paid to create likenesses that would last as reminders of how someone looked at a particular age, in a particular outfit, or at a specific event like a wedding. The act of committing these loved ones to film declares that each and every individual mattered; was loved, valued, and cared for; and the photographs themselves would likely have been treasured. Perhaps they were framed, hung on walls; or maybe printed from negatives on to paper and positioned in intimate, hand-held, icon-like keepsakes, small hand-tooled leather folios where they could be opened, closed, gazed upon and tucked away for safe keeping. Maybe they were collected in scrap books. Maybe they were taken at school, or after some significant ceremony. These are not candids of people in the middle of an activity, unaware of the camera. They are posed, the subjects are looking the photographer in the eye. They are precious. And now, they have been enlarged, reproduced and lifted up, quite literally some of them, several stories, to monumentalize. They look us in the eye and, by virtue of where they are positioned, within what was the ghetto, they ask – Why?

Asking some of the same questions, Zuzanna Radzik represents an increasing number of Poles who believe that Jewish heritage is an integral part of the history of Poland, and must be taught as well as preserved. She wants her fellow citizens to know that killing during the Holocaust was not limited to places with names so many people are familiar with: Auschwitz and Treblinka. She wants people to remember that, in small communities like Stoczek Wegrowski, where 188 Jews were murdered on September 22, 1942, during Yom Kippur; vital community members perished. As supervisor for The School of Dialogue, sponsored by The Forum for Dialogue Among Nations, a Polish non-profit organization, Ms. Radzik is hoping to also combat antisemitism by creating a better-informed citizenry. Her group sends out educators; through schools in the villages, cities, and towns in Poland, to give students an idea of where Jews lived, worked, and worshiped before their numbers were reduced to less than one half one per cent of what they were before the war. Radzik hopes to make history real, and literally “bring it home” to places where today, the community members have never met a Jew or seen a synagogue. “When we show them where the ghetto was in their town and that Jews were killed there, it all becomes real.” Radzik reminds us. Her organization highlights shared religious traditions and teaches about Jewish holidays and their connections to other calendars.
On the sight of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising of April, 1943, in the neighborhood of Murnaow, murals have been painted by Adam Walas. They are in the entryway of an apartment and feature prominent Jews who lived there before the war. Ludwik Zamenhof is one of them. He created Esperanto, the common language that he’d hoped would unite peoples of many cultures. One of the neighborhood’s residents, Beata Chomatowska, has designed an education project involving thirty other local individuals who are also interested in educating citizens about the district’s past.

Zbigniew Nizinski rides his bike through small villages and towns in eastern Poland to talk to elderly people who remember where Jews were buried. He is a 52-year-old Baptist who then places memorial stones on graves that have not been marked, just so that murdered individuals can be remembered. Radzik, Chomatowska, and Zbigniew all hope to help people continue to remember what made the places in Poland sacred – the people who lived there – the citizens who were individuals, who inspired, who worked, who created community and whose memory must be preserved.

Monday, November 9, 2009

Kristallnacht


November 9, 2009 ~ 7:00 p.m.
Lewis and Shirley White Theatre
Jewish Community Campus
5801 West 115th Street
Overland Park, Kansas


Seventy-one years ago on November 9 and 10, Kristallnacht (the “Night of Broken Glass”), an anti-Jewish pogrom devised by Joseph Goebbels, Hitler’s minister for propaganda and public enlightenment, was carried out by the SS and other national police agencies. Jewish businesses were vandalized and homes ransacked and burned. At least 100 Jews were murdered and 30,000 Jewish men were imprisoned in concentration camps. Kristallnacht ended the illusion that normal Jewish life in Germany and Austria was still possible.

This year’s community-wide commemoration of Kristallnacht will showcase the documentary film Kristallnacht, newly produced for MCHE’s Witnesses to the Holocaust series. The film describes the rise of Hitler and the Nazis and the emergence of increasingly brutal policies toward Germany’s Jews that culminated in the violence of November 9-10, 1938. It features excerpts from MCHE’s videotaped survivor testimonies along with archival and personal photos.

Resources:
Kristallnacht Order
USHMM collection
USHMM online exhibition
Primary Source Documents
It Came From Within...71 Years Since Kristallnacht