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A new exhibition at Yad Vashem shows photos taken of Jews from all angles: Germans, Jews, and Americans or Soviets – the murderers, victims and liberators
Jewish photographer Mendel Grossman shoots the deportation of Jews from the Lodz ghetto.Credit: Courtesy of the Yad Vashem Archives
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“I took thousands of pictures, and I kept on taking more and more pictures, for a later time, for posterity,” said Zvi Kadushin shortly before his death in 1997. A half-century earlier, Kadushin, an amateur photographer from Kovno, Lithuania, secretly took a raft of photos in the ghetto there, which was built in 1941 and liquidated three years later.
Photographs from the 'Flashes of Memory' exhibition at Yad Vasham.Credit: Courtesy of the Yad Vashem Archive
His work as an X-ray technician at a German military hospital gave him access to photography equipment and the means to develop pictures. He also came up with techniques for covertly taking photos through his clothes. He hid the pictures, and himself, before the ghetto was liquidated and its captives killed. Thanks to his efforts, many of his photographs survived the war, and he later showed them around the world.
Jewish photographer Henryk Ross.Credit: Courtesy of the Yad Vashem Archives
Now some of these photos can been seen in an exhibition that just opened at Yad Vashem, “Flashes of Memory,” curated by Vivian Uria. The Holocaust photos are divided into three main categories based on the person who wielded the camera: Germans, Jews, and Americans or Soviets. In other words, the murderers, the victims and the liberators.
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Each had their own reasons for pulling out a camera, whether it was a professional expensive one or a simple amateur model. The exhibition shows just how slippery the term “propaganda” can be. Alongside the photos staged by the Nazis, both of the “master race” as filmed by Leni Riefenstahl for Hitler and of the “inferior” Jews as depicted in the magazine Der Stürmer, are photographs staged by the Soviets after the liberation of the camps.
Especially notable are the pictures of Jewish prisoners from Auschwitz, who were brought back there after the liberation to stand before the cameras of the Soviet Army. According to the exhibition’s catalog, since photographers weren’t present at the liberation on January 27, 1945, a week later the Soviets reenacted the event.
A Mendel Grossman photo of children in the Lodz Ghetto.Credit: Mendel Grossman / Courtesy of the Yad Vashem Archives
Indeed, not only the Nazis but also the Americans and Russians took photographs during the Holocaust for press and propaganda purposes, including for use in the prosecution of Nazi war criminals, and in the re-education of the people of occupied Germany.
Some pictures in the exhibition can’t be easily categorized; for example, the photos by German soldiers, police officers or ordinary citizens who weren’t taking pictures for anyone else. Some came to the ghettos because of their work. Others just happened to pass by. For many of them, the ghettos were a startling sight that made them reach for their cameras.
German readers send in photos
In these photographs, the camera captures the Nazi brutality to which the Jewish prisoners were subjected, not just the “unproductive Jews” whom the Nazis sought to portray in their propaganda. One photo shows a woman and three children in the Warsaw Ghetto. The photo credit reads: “A personal photograph taken by an unidentified German.”
German SS man Heinz Jost is credited with several hard-to-look-at photos, including one of a Jewish boy lying on the ground in the Warsaw Ghetto. Another is of two children in the ghetto – a boy lying on the ground dead or near it, and a girl holding him.
A different group of private photographs was originally published by Der Stürmer, which encouraged readers to send in anti-Semitic material that would be published in its letters-to-the-editor section. Readers rose to the challenge and sent in photographs and accompanying text.
“This is how they idly roam the streets of Lublin,” wrote Ernst Müller from Vienna. “The eternal Jew! See how he goes around in the world endangering humanity” was the caption on the back of a photo sent in by Cpl. Albert Glass. “This is how we deloused the Jews in Poland,” an unnamed private wrote on the back of a photograph.
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Lodz ghetto photographer Mendel Grossman in his photo lab inside the ghetto.Credit: Courtesy of the Yad Vashem Archive
Jewish photographer Mendel Grossman shoots the deportation of Jews from the Lodz ghetto. Credit: Courtesy of the Yad Vashem Archives
A photograph by Mendel Grossman from the 'Flashes of Memory' exhibition at Yad Vasham. Credit: Mendel Grossman / Courtesy of the Yad Vashem Archives
A Kadushin photo of Jews digging potatoes.Credit: Kadushin / Courtesy of the Yad Vashem Archives
Besides Germans, some Jews – not many, to be sure – had permission to take photos. Such was the case with the photographers of the Judenrat in the Lodz Ghetto, the second-largest ghetto after the Warsaw Ghetto.
Chaim Rumkowski, the head of the Judenrat in Lodz, wanted to show the Germans the ghetto’s economic prowess so that they wouldn’t liquidate the place. To that end, he hired two professional Jewish photographers named Mendel Grossman and Henryk Ross.
The two worked in the ghetto’s statistics department; their job was to take pictures for the reports written by the department. But they – as well as Aryeh Ben-Menachem, Grossman’s assistant – also took a lot of photos outside their job, in direct violation of Rumkowski’s orders.
From the 'Flashes of Memory' exhibition at Yad Vasham. Credit: Karina Pasternak
From the 'Flashes of Memory' exhibition at Yad Vasham.Credit: Courtesy of the Yad Vashem Archive
From the 'Flashes of Memory' exhibition at Yad Vasham.Credit: Courtesy of the Yad Vashem Archive
From the 'Flashes of Memory' exhibition at Yad Vasham.Credit: Courtesy of the Yad Vashem Archive
“Because I had a camera as part of my official job, I could capture the whole tragic time of the Lodz Ghetto. I did it knowing that if I were caught, my family and I would be tortured and killed,” Ross later said.
Also shown in the exhibition is a page from an underground photo album put together by Ben-Menachem in 1943. It shows the travails of ghetto life, the kind of thing that didn’t appear in the official Judenrat reports and albums. One page shows Rumkowski and unsparing photos of deportations and dead bodies. The full album did not survive. All that is left are reproductions made by the Polish underground.
The eyes of the victims
Also on display is a letter dated December 8, 1941 that Rumkowski sent to Grossman. He wrote: “I hereby inform you that it is prohibited for you to engage in your occupation for personal purposes .... From now on, the photography work will be limited to the department in which you work. All other photography activity is strictly prohibited.”
Grossman did not survive the Holocaust. Yad Vashem director Avner Shalev writes in the preface to the exhibition catalog that Grossman was both a victim and the eyes of the victims, noting that Grossman preserved human dignity in his images of the Lodz Ghetto. These included the dying days of his relatives – his brother-in-law eating a bowl of soup at the end of a day of labor, his father wrapped in a prayer shawl and praying for the last time, his young nephew chewing on a carrot.
Uria, the curator, says that while some may argue that photography provides a narrow “selective reconstruction” of reality, “bear in mind that photographs provide incontrovertible testimony that a given incident did in fact happen.”
As she puts it, “Photography doesn’t invent an event, it serves as evidence of its existence. The manner of photography can distort the picture presented, but there is no question that the thing seen in the photograph existed at the time the photo was taken.”
Her words are echoed by a quote from the 1942 diary of Rokhl Auerbakh, a Holocaust survivor and Polish Jewish writer who directed Yad Vashem’s Department for the Collection of Witness Testimony in the 1950s and ‘60s.
“Let them film, let them film as much as possible so a filmed record will remain of the situation to which they have brought a community of 400,000 Jews,” she wrote, referring to the German photographers. “They have the ability to create such a record. The editing, the interpretation – those aren’t important,” she added.
“But let there remain on film, even in snatches, the faces of the Jewish passersby from the dim streets. The faces, the eyes that in the years to come will silently shout out the truth. May the masses of beggars be remembered, the people of yesterday dying a slow death from poverty and hunger in the closed ghetto.”
Nearly 1,500 images are displayed in the exhibition, and the ones by Jews can be seen as an answer to the sole Nazi victory in the war – the vast photographic and cinematic record they left behind.
“The German-produced visual materials, much of which were created for propaganda purposes, played a large part in shaping the visual imagery of the events of World War II, including the Holocaust,” says Daniel Uziel, the head of Yad Vashem’s photo-collection section and the historical adviser for the exhibition.
“Even now, for the purpose of a historic visual representation of the Holocaust, one cannot avoid relying to a large extent on German material, including material that was created for anti-Semitic propaganda purposes.”
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Cute Jewish Girls-30 Most Beautiful Jewish Women In The World
Cute Jewish Girls in the world. Jewish women are known for having a lethal combination of beauty and brain. Jewish women with their exquisite features and bright eyes look gorgeous. Their stunning hazel to striking blue eyes and pointed nose are just overwhelming and hard to resist.
Jewish women have got an elegant bone structure, which is envied by women all over the world. Jewish mothers are the ones to identify their nationality. They have an outclass sense of humor.
Jewish women prove to be usually pros at posing for the camera. The article covers a few of the most beautiful Jewish women from around the world, which includes actresses, models, singers, pageant winners, and some politicians as well. The numbers do not represent any ranking here.
The stunningly beautiful 18-year-old brunette, Karine Aliya, is a music and dance lover who was crowned Miss Israel 2016 at Tel Aviv port. Her shining dark eyes and heart winning smile are her best features. Her lean, slim long legs cannot be missed either.
Linor Abargil is an Israeli lawyer, model, actress, and exquisite beauty who won the Miss World Beauty Pageant 1998. She’s not just a pretty face but an inspiration for many as she is a global advocate in the fight against sexual violence. Her dark hair, long legs, and brown eyes are just lovely altogether. Check out these Most Beautiful Politicians.
Striking beauty Bess Myerson was crowned Miss America in 1945. She was an American Politician as well as a television actress. Her winning Miss American just after World War 2 was considered as a sign of Jewish representation in America. However, her biographer Susan Dworkin said that “In the Jewish community, she was the most famous pretty girl since Queen Esther.” Also, have a look at these 50 Romantic Jewish Couples-Wedding and Relationship Photos
Born on June 23, 1991, dark beauty, Yityish Titi Aynaw is a gorgeous Ethiopian-born, an Israeli model who had been the first Ethiopian-born Jew to win the title of Miss Israel in 2013. Her winning the title got her both national and international fame and thus led her to the modeling career. Her tall figure and bright brown eyes are captivating.
Avigail Alfatov, with bright golden blonde hair, is a beauty queen who is an Israeli national youth fencing champion and soldier. She represented Israel at beauty pageant Miss Universe 2015 as Miss Israel 2014. Her striking blue eyes go perfectly with her creamy white skin.
Mila Kunis, who is a mother of two, is an American Jewish actress who appeared in several tv-series and commercials. She has won several awards as a supporting actress, such as Saturn Awards and Oklahoma Film Critics Circle. She has spell bounding hazel brown eyes and brown hair.
Alona Tal, who describes herself as a spiritual person, is a gorgeous Israeli singer and actress. Her sandy blonde hair goes perfectly with her brown eyes and flawless skin. She appeared as an actress in Tzimerim and HaPijamot and did a fantastic job.
Born on November 11, 1973, a world-famous Israeli politician, Orly Levy, is a gorgeous lady with delicate features and lovely brown hair. Her almond eyes are lovely. She represents an Israeli political party named Gesher and is playing a significant role in the political world of Israel.
Golden beige blonde beauty Bar Rafaeli is an Israeli actress, model, tv host, and business lady. She got hype in the fashion world after she won the title of Model of the Year 2000 in an Israeli beauty pageant. She appeared in editorials for Vogue, Elle, and GQ. Her tall and lean figure and deep-sea blue eyes are exquisite. She is a beauty with brains and ran several campaigns regarding water usage and conservation, as well as civil marriages in Israel.
Born on September 8, 1971, brunette Brooke Burke is an American Jewish television personality. Her mother has a Portuguese background, but she was an adopted child and raised as a Jew. The multi-talented beauty is known for her charming smile and glowing skin. She had also written a fantastic book named The Naked Mom: A Modern Mom’s Fearless Revelations, Savvy Advice, and Soulful Reflections. Besides being an author of the best-selling book, she is a dancer and a famous television personality. She successfully hosted Wild On as a Playboy model and effortlessly won the seventh season of Dancing with the Stars. She was featured in Need for Speed: Underground 2 as well.
Born on August 9, 1971, Nikki Ziering, is known for her striking blue eyes and soft blonde hair. She also appeared as Barker’s Beauty for The Price is right. She was famous for being the swimwear model who modeled for Venus Swimwear.
The redhead Isla Fisher is a Jewish Australian Actress who appeared in various series like Bay Cove, Home and Away, and films like Out of Depth, Scooby-Do, Wedding Crashers. She won the award for Best Breakthrough Performance by MTV Movie Awards and Best Animated Female by Alliance of Women Film Journalists. You can get her amazing hair color by asking your hairstylist for strawberry blonde hair with pale red highlights.
The very famous Jewish American actress and model Marilyn Monroe was known for her ravishing retro blond locks, pouty lips, and legendary sexy figure. Her appealing blonde hair blended with her enchantingly beautiful features turned her into a beauty icon, and she also earned the name of the sixth greatest female screen legend in American film history by the American Film Institute.
Born on January 28, 1950, the American model, singer, and actress, Barbi Benton, is exceptionally beautiful. She was born in New York City to a family of Jews. She was successful in grabbing the limelight in a television show named HeeHaw. She also did a small role in comedy series of ABC time titled Sugar Time. Her dark brown lock and grayish-blue eyes are immensely attractive, which are still admired by the entire world.
Born on October 24, 1971, the dazzling blonde beauty Caprice Bourret is an American television personality as well as a successful businesswoman. She owns her company named By Caprice. She got various titles like the world’s sexiest woman, Woman of the Year, etc. by the News of the World and GQ. She beautifully appeared on many magazine covers, namely FHM, Vogue, and Cosmopolitan. She was titled “World Sexiest Woman” by the News of the World. She was playing a leading part in the marketing campaigns of Pizza Hut and Diet Coke.
Born on April 5, 1976, Sendi Bar is an Israeli actress and model with gorgeous blonde hair who has got the most amazing eyes and a stunning lean figure. Her mother was an Iraqi Jew woman, and her father was a Libyan born Jew man. She started her career from a popular TV show named Deadly Fortune. She landed on a few modeling projects for Pilpel and Castro.
The brunette beauty with hazel brown eyes, Noa Tishby, who was born on May 22, 1975, is an actress, singer, model, and producer known for her exceptional looks. She acted in various films like Ghosts of Girlfriends Past and Skeleton Man. For a couple of years as a singer, she served in the Israeli military.
Drop-dead gorgeous Israeli actress, model, and TV host Yael has got striking green eyes that can win hearts and an enchanting pointed nose. She also modeled in NYC and Paris, along with some famous artists like Kate Moss. For more inspiration, do have a look at these Top 10 Disabled Female Models From World You Must Know.
Born on December 29, 1982, in California, a professional American actress and model, Alison Brie, is known for her attractive gray eyes and caramel brown hair. She also appeared in the TV series Mad Men and BoJack Horsemen. Along with these, she did some super hit movies like The Post, The Disaster Artist, How to be Single, The Little Hours, Get Hard, Sleeping with other People, The Five Year Engagement, The Lego Movie, and Scream 4. To award her services in Hollywood, she was nominated for the Golden Globe awards and Screen Actors Guild Award.
Born on September 15, 1992, in Israel to a Morrocan Jew family. Miss Israel 2012, Shani Hazan is known for her angelic features and dark chocolate hair. Her long, lean legs and stunning brown eyes are worth noting. She successfully served in the Israeli Navy, during which she won Miss Israel. After that, she beautifully represented her country in Miss Internation 2014.
Born on January 25, 1975, in Ontario (Canada), Mia Kirshner, is not only a writer and actress but a social activist as well. Her slim figure, along with her dark brown hair and gray eyes are exquisite. Her parents are a Jew. She got famous globally for playing her role so well as Jenny Schecter on the cable TV series The L Word, and for her recurring guest role as the terrorist Mandy on the TV series 24. She wrote an excellent book named “I live here,” which became the best selling book of her time.
The 30-years-old sing, Emmy Rossum, is a
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