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When Joseph Bau, a young Polish artist and newly arrived
prisoner, was made a draftsman at the Plaszow Concentration
Camp, he realized that art would save his life. The camp's
Nazi leaders put him to work drafting signs and letters for
the party. However, Mr. Bau had other plans for his ingenuity.
From a potato, he fashioned a stamp with which to forge his
fellow inmates' escape papers. With brushes and paints, he
created playing cards that he secretly distributed to keep
spirits up. Sketch by secret sketch, he also began to document
life at the camp, stashing these records away in the secret
compartments of his work cases.
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| Exhibit at
UNHQ Visitors lobby UN Chronicle photo/Dalai
Fazio | Today, Mr. Bau's raw
impressions of the Holocaust represent some of the only art to
have survived concentration camp life. His work joins that of
David Friedman, whose portraits of inmates were the only
artwork to survive Auschwitz, Henny de Brito and Hanka
Kornfeld-Marder, in the exhibit "Art of the Suvivors"
displayed at the United Nations Headquarters. Between 27
January and 22 February, visitors to the UN can view a wide
range of Holocaust art, including Bau's books and playing
cards, Friedman's portraits, and the work perhaps least
acknowledged - that of survivors coming to terms with the
horrors of their experiences.
"Holocaust survivors had different ways of finding outlets
for the expression of their experiences", said Lilli
Schindler, the daughter of Henny de Brito and, like her mother
and father before her, a United Nations employee. Similar to
many survivors, her mother has been unable to speak of the
many horrors she witnessed, and art has been essential to her.
The exhibit, she said, is a tribute to the survivors'
expressions. "It's remarkable how people can find it in
themselves to overcome the horrors", she added.
In order to move on with their lives, however, many of the
Holocaust's survivors first needed to address their
experiences, and the world that they encountered after
liberation was not always welcoming. "After the war, people
did not want to talk about concentration camps", said Miriam
Friedman Morris, the daughter of David Friedman. Fleeing to
the former Czechoslovakia and then to Israel in 1949, he
encountered an overwhelming sense of wanting to move forward
among the survivors. In the United States, too, the horrors of
the Holocaust were still a "silent topic". Mr. Friedman,
however, was determined to have his work shown and began a new
series of work he called "Because They Were Jews!" Ms.
Friedman Morris explained "he wanted to show the world what
happened in the camps". With gaunt faces and fierce eyes, his
painted characters continue to speak silent volumes, lined up
or gathered in groups against bleak backgrounds. The
collection, which is represented by reproductions in the UN
exhibit, has made waves in the art world. It was also the
first collection to be accepted by the United States Holocaust
Museum in Washington, D.C.
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| Picture by
Joseph Bau UN Chronicle photo/Dalai
Fazio |
Socially and politically, many people and countries are
stressing that a refocusing on the atrocities of the Holocaust
is an urgent priority as anti-Semitism again begins to rear
its ugly head internationally. On 26 January 2007, the United
Nations voted to condemn an Iranian conference of Holocaust
deniers that took place in December 2006. More than half a
century after the end of the Shoah, it seems there has hardly
been a more timely moment for remembrance.
The United Nations featured a dialogue on "Confronting
Anti-Semitism" as part of its "Unlearning Intolerance" series
in 2004, and it continues to address the topic with this
exhibit, which stands alongside one in remembrance of the
Sinti and Roma killed during the Holocaust. Hundreds of people
gathered at the exhibit's opening, and speakers included Rabbi
Israel Singer of the World Jewish Congress and Shashi Tharoor,
the United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Communications
and Public Information. "The Holocaust reminds us that all
human beings are capable of great cruelty, but also of great
strength", said Mr. Tharoor in his opening remarks. "These
artists are both witnesses and storytellers. They are both
victims and heroes."
After the war, Holocaust survivors and the world at large
saw the forming of the United Nations as a source of hope.
"They saw it as a way to prevent another World War", Ms.
Schindler said. The artists' children say that the UN
continues to represent protection against the atrocities of
genocide, and that it is an especially appropriate place for
their parents' works.
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| Joseph Bau's
daughters, Clila and Hadasa, beside their parents'
picture - Joseph and Rebecca Bau UN Chronicle
photo/Dalai Fazio | "The
United Nations is the international stage that my father
wanted" agreed Clila Bau, Joseph Bau's daughter. While Mr. Bau
passed away in 2002, and Mr. Friedman in 1980, their children
note how proud he would have been of the exhibit. "It's a
once-in-a-lifetime opportunity", Ms. Friedman Morris said.
Visit the "Art of the Survivors" exhibit at the United
Nations visitors lobby now through 22 February 2007.
For more information on the United Nations "Unlearning
Intolerance" series or for webcasts of the events, please
visit: http://www.un.org/Pubs/chronicle/2005/webArticles/un_seminars2.html
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