Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2003/08/07

[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]

Subject: [Leica] Nathan's PAW 29: Warsaw
From: Nathan Wajsman <n.wajsman@chello.nl>
Date: Fri, 08 Aug 2003 07:25:33 +0200

In the midst of settling into our new life in the Netherlands I do
continue to take pictures--it just takes a bit longer to get them
scanned and posted, as SWMBO will make me sleep in the garden shed if I
spend too much time on the computer while there are still many undone
"honey-dos". So, with that...

In week 29 I had to go to Warsaw for a couple of days to take care of
some formalities related to my Polish birth certificate. I have not been
to the city for 31 years, and obviously a lot has changed since then.
Warsaw today is an impressive city in every respect. But what I was
interested in during the few hours I had for sight-seeing was the Warsaw
ghetto. Before the war, Warsaw had a huge Jewish population. When the
Germans arrived in 1939, they confined the Jews to the ghetto, and as
time went on, the boundaries of the ghetto were moved to make the ghetto
smaller and smaller. In 1942-43 it was the Warsaw Jews' turn to become
part of the Final Solution, and the Germans began emptying the ghetto by
shipping the inhabitants to Auschwitz. In the spring of 1943 a few
hundred Jewish men, knowing that they were going to die either way,
staged a desperate uprising. It took the Germans some weeks to quell it,
of course with the utmost brutality. At the end, the last 14 fighters
committed suicide in their bunker. That was the end of what had been the
largest Jewish community in Europe.

After the war, the Polish government showed little or no interest in
preserving the ghetto or even putting up any memorials to what had
happened there. The monuments you see today were all built in the late
1980s or early 1990s and largely financed by American and Western
European Jewish organizations. This says something about the Polish
attitude towards Jews and also explains why the few thousands Jews who
remained after the war largely left the country in the 1960s and early
70s.

Here is the the view of the inside of the memorial on Umschlagplatz, the
spot from where 300,000 Jews were deported to the gas chambers. It is
quite a moving experience to sit inside the stone structure and look out
on the normal life going on outside:
http://www.wajsmanphoto.com/2003_29.jpg

A detail of the inscriptions inside:
http://www.wajsmanphoto.com/2003_29alt1.jpg

The small stone monument on the spot where the last defenders committed
suicide on 8th May 1943, surrounded by apartment blocks. The
inscriptions are in Polish and Hebrew:
http://www.wajsmanphoto.com/2003_29alt2.jpg

The ghetto as such does not exist anymore, except one short street which
has been preserved as it looked before the war. There are still small
shops on the ground floor, but otherwise the buildings seem largely
uninhabitable:
http://www.wajsmanphoto.com/2003_29alt3.jpg

And finally a detail from one of the courtyards:
http://www.wajsmanphoto.com/2003_29alt4.jpg

All pictures taken with the M6 and 35mm Summilux, the main and Alt1 on
Fuji Acros, the rest on Kodak Tri-X.

The complete PAW index is at:
http://www.wajsmanphoto.com/indexpaw2003.htm
and comments/critique are always welcome and appreciated.

Nathan



- --
Nathan Wajsman
Almere, The Netherlands

e-mail: n.wajsman@chello.nl
Mobile: +31 630 868 671

Photo site: http://www.wajsmanphoto.com


- --
To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html

Replies: Reply from Christer Almqvist <chris@almqvist.net> (Re: [Leica] Nathan's PAW 29: Warsaw)
Reply from Ted Grant <tedgrant@shaw.ca> (Re: [Leica] Nathan's PAW 29: Warsaw)