
At new
Jewish museum in Krakow, past seen via lens of Poland’s present
From JTA News Service http://www.jta.org
KRAKOW, May 10 (JTA) — A new museum in Krakow hopes to fill a void in Jewish cultural sites in this city and offer a new perspective on the Jewish past. The Galicia Jewish Museum in Kazimierz, Krakow’s Jewish district, opened with an exhibit by Chris Schwartz, a British photojournalist who has worked in Poland since the early 1980s.
Schwartz collaborated with British professor Jonathan Webber,
who provides text for Schwartz’s photos, and a team of researchers on the
project, which they said has been “10 years in the making.”
The 135 color photographs display scenes from contemporary
Polish life that are connected with the Jewish past.
In five sections, the exhibit shows modern streets, farmers’
fields, buildings, synagogues and graveyards that once were centers of Jewish
life in Galicia, the eastern part
of Poland. The structures that represented
Galicia’s Jewish life now are all in ruins or completely remodeled.
A book accompanying the exhibit, “Traces of Memory,” published
by the Littman Library and University
of Indiana Press, will include 400 color photographs and more of Webber’s text, and will be out in the fall
of 2005.
In the exhibit, one photo shows faint Yiddish writing next
to a modern city street sign. Another
depicts a ruined synagogue, the roof long gone and trees sprouting from the top. A third photo shows a field in which
a Jewish cemetery once stood; farmers
have taken care to plow around the cemetery, leaving the site untouched.
At the opening for the museum, which is located in an old furniture
factory that has been transformed
into a hip, new art space, Schwartz said people were “universally knocked out” by his exhibit.
He also said it was Krakow’s only contemporary treatment of
its Jewish past in the form of a museum.
Most relics of Jewish life in Poland exist in the form of centuries-old synagogues.
Schwartz, whose father is Jewish but who considers himself
“post-denominational,” said history can be viewed
in two ways: “We can either compare everything to the prewar glory, or we
can realize that it’s amazing that anything survived at all after the ferocity
of the Nazi destruction.”
His photos, he said, strive to preserve what survives.
Schwartz said he and Webber focused their research on Galicia
because it was the heart of Jewish Poland.
“Galician Jews were proud to be Galician, as were the non-Jews,
and this was one of the most exciting, thriving areas of Jewish culture in
the world,” he said.
Przemek Piakarski, chairman of the Jewish studies department
and professor of Yiddish at Jagiellonian University in Krakow, said he initially
had low expectations for the museum.
“I thought, ‘Once again, something useless,’ ” he said. But
instead, he said he was pleasantly
surprised and enthused when he visited.
He said the organizers should translate the captions, which
are in Polish and English, into Hebrew
and Yiddish and run educational events that incorporate Yiddish music and explanations.
Schwartz agreed that the next step for the museum will be to
develop educational programs, with everything from dialogue programs to debates
on topics such as “Where was God during
the Holocaust?”
Gilad Roth, an Israeli musician living in Krakow, said he found
the museum realistic and moving.
“Most Israelis want to continue living; they don’t want to
go to the past,” he said.
Roth pointed to what he said was a common problem among organized
trips to Jewish historical sites in
Eastern Europe by Israelis, Americans and Western European Jews: They often
have a very rigorous schedule, are heavily guarded and
have little time to meet Jews who still live in Poland and other Eastern European countries.
The Galicia Jewish Museum, he said, gives them an opportunity
to see beneath the surface of contemporary
Polish cities and town to find the roots of their Jewish past.
The museum’s sponsors hope the museum will prompt a new generation
of Poles, Jews and Polish Jews to learn about and grapple with this history.
“No one tries to understand what happened through contemporary photographs. This generation has to look at it and understand it for ourselves,” Schwartz said.
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International Survey
of Jewish Monuments
http://www.isjm.org/news/article13.html
Last updated:
May 12, 2004