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Holocaust Memorials

Die Plage (The Plague)

· Harley Gaber at the Oregon Jewish Museum and Center for Holocaust Education ·

In memory of Alice Meyer (z”l) who fought the rising dark forces to the end.

Tiresias:” You mock my blindness? Let me tell you this: You with your precious eyes, you’re blind to the corruption of your life, to the house you live in, those you live with – ” (415) – Sophocles Oedipus the King, translated by Robert Fagles.

DO YOU REMEMBER the unfolding of this famous tragedy? A priest implores the mighty Oedipus, the king of Thebes who rescued all his people once before, to stop the plague that’s ravaging the land. The ruler eagerly agrees, but when he starts intuiting the truth that after all might save them, he does not want to see it – just as the blind prophet Tiresias, who knows and was commanded to reveal it, has trouble naming it for fear of wreaking havoc. The truth, once it’s acknowledged, will lift the plague but also devastate the king, and his desire to remain unseeing does end up leading to his ultimate demise, including gouging out his eyes himself. Blind, after all, for real.

Perhaps you share with me a sense of needing to protect ourselves from ever more bad news, unending, constant, one development more dire than the next. It feels like our sanity depends on turning our eyes and ears away from yet more fear-inducing bits, just like the king of Thebes. Pandemic(s), the rise of authoritarian regimes drifting into fascism, wars and the ultimate threat to our existence, the devastation of our planet through self-inflicted climate change: plagues, all.

So why expose yourself to looking at depictions of the Holocaust, no matter how compelling, how educational, how directly speaking to the human heart? Won’t looking at the Oregon Jewish Museum and Center for Holocaust Education‘s current exhibition, Harley Gaber’s Die Plage (The Plague) depress us even more?

We must. We must engage because we’ve known since Ancient Greece, if not before, that blind passivity does not end well. We must, because the medium that carries the message, in this case walls and walls of 390 assembled, collaged, sometimes manipulated archival photographs from 1918-1945 Germany and other objects, is more effective than a thousand words or numbers. It conveys that plagues will haunt us unless we fight them and uproot the seeds that have been lying fallow, not destroyed. And if you argue I should skip the guilt trip, since all your life you’ve faced the issues of the Holocaust to utmost saturation, I get it, but I disagree.

The only way to fight the plague is to name, to depict and educate. It requires from all of us a willingness to be confronted with the history, our part in it, its implications for the world we live in right this moment. Even when looking is hard.

A close inspection of Gaber’s installation might reveal some parallels to social and political developments right here and now. It reminds us how authoritarian mindsets are fostered and how right wing structures are organized from scratch, with the support of protofascistic organizations. We live in a time where authoritarians get increasingly elected into office internationally, like Meloni in Italy, Orban in in Hungary, Erdogan in Turkey, Duterte in the Philippines, Putin in Russia or are hovering in the wings, like Le Pen in France, the Partij voor de Vrijheid, (party for Freedom) PVV in Holland, and the Sweden Democrats, a right wing, Islamo-phobic populist party that won in recent elections as part of a coalition with centrists. Yesterday holocaust survivor #LilianaSegre (a victim of Mussolini’s race laws) handed over the Presidency of Italy’s Senate to Benito La Russa, a man who wants to be an heir to Mussolini, gives the fascist salute, and collects fascist memorabilia.

Just last weekend, the far-right AfD (Alternative for Deutschland) doubled their votes in state elections to over 10%. One of their politicians, Holger Winterstein, publicly danced on the slabs of the Holocaust Memorial in Berlin this week, spouting phrases about the rebirth of the German Volk.

Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, Berlin – Photo Friderike Heuer

Many characteristics of fascism can be found in the platforms of all of these leaders, including racial purity as a basis for national belonging, a fear of White-replacement, anti-feminism, a cult of leadership and worship of the military, a rebirth narrative, suspensions of democratic freedoms, and attacks against the press. I need not spell out how all of this applies to what is going on closer to home.

***

“Perhaps the belief that consciousness permeates everything and transcends – by that I mean encompasses – the cyclic nature of living and dying, would allow us to accept the inevitable beginnings and endings of things as part of a meaningful continuity, not just a tragic aberration” – Harley Gaber, September 2010 as related in the Interviews by Robert Reigle.

HARLEY GABER (1943 – 2011) was born in Chicago into a Jewish-American family. Until the 1970s he was trained and worked as a composer, studying with Horace Reisberg in high school, then Kenneth Gaburo at the University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana, and later Darius Milhaud, among others. His minimalist work is hailed as among the most distinctive of post-World War II American music. (The link leads to a detailed review of the artist’s music.)

His interest in artistic abstraction had started early with a fascination of Jackson Pollock’s painting, which he claimed influenced his music. So did Morton Feldman‘s elegant 1963 chamber work dedicated to the painter “De Kooning,” by all reports. The cross-over between music and visual art was present then, from the beginning. So was the tendency, in both art forms, to alternate between sparseness – compression, exigence, selection – and abundance, with the former more characterizing the music, the latter the visual onslaught of the montage motifs. Major compositions include Sovereign of the Centre (1972-74),The Winds Rise in the North: String Quintet (1974),  I Saw My Mother Ascending Mt Fuji in 2009,  The Realm Of Indra’s Net and In Memoriam 2010.

Harley Gaber in front of one of his photomontage panels in 2000 – Photo courtesy of Christina Ankofska

In the late 1970’s Gaber moved from NYC to California, leaving music behind for a time, devoting himself to playing and teaching tennis, taking care of his aging parents, and eventually the montage work across a decade that resulted in Die Plage. Several trips to Germany were undertaken for archival research and exploring historic places, Weimar and the concentration camp Buchenwald memorial site in Weimar’s suburbs, among them.

KZ Buchenwald Memorial Site – Photos Friderike Heuer

By 2002 he returned to composing, as well as some forays into film-making. His view of music shifted in perspective, former technical musical tools and conceptualization of consciousness replaced by a focus on the complexities of the heart. In a profound crisis, wrecked by insomnia, he took his own life in 2011 two weeks after his last composition, In Memoriam 2010, was published, a piece commissioned by the Dan J. Epstein Family Foundation, dedicated to Nancy Epstein, who passed away in 2010 and was a close family friend of the Gabers.

***

Eine neue Kunst muss endlich angeben müssen wozu sie gebraucht werden will. ” (It’s about time that a new form of art declares what it wants to be used for.) – Berthold Brecht, Schriften zur Literatur und Kunst.

FOR SOMEONE INTERESTED in quantum physics and in the art of the Weimar Republic, as Gaber was by all reports, photomontage seems ideally suited as a visual medium. The combination of intimate scale and monumental extent, with ever smaller units affecting each other across space, in some ways mirrored his approach to musical notation. He drew parallels between our insights from physics to how he perceived humanity to function. In quantum entanglement you cannot describe the state of one of the quanta without the state of the other one. They can only be apprehended as a unit, even if they are far apart. Gaber’s montages gave visual life to this concept: the distinct groups of a society only to be understood in their linkage to each other. Perpetrator and victim, oppressor and oppressed part of the same system under the umbrella of a deadly ideology.

Photomontage basically refers to collaging with photographs, creating new and different wholes from altered parts, telling a story. It used to be a dark room, paper, scissors and glue affair. These days computer technology allows seamless merging and alteration of digital images where all evidence of historical reality of the components disappears. At the heart of it is fragmentation and construction, playing with perspectives that encourage or prevent a subject’s visibility. The use of scale can obscure – sometimes smaller segments can distract from the larger picture, sometimes grand expansions blur your ability to see detail. Visibility, of course, will matter only if you are inclined to look. The switching back and forth between micro, macro or intermediate levels can be in itself demanding.

Then there is the matter of representation: who is represented, how do we represent? Are we manipulated by caricature, or surreal additions, by use of symbolism and/or text? If our hold on reality is ridiculed by including absurd juxtapositions, are we turned off enough to turn away? The question every artist needs to struggle with is how to represent a topic so over-saturated in visual memorial culture like the Holocaust. How do you prevent archival photographs of boots and soldiers, trains and camps and swastikas in endless repetition from being seen as overly familiar tropes, sparking associations only to a concept, safely relegated to the past?

In Europe between the wars, photomontage techniques were used by many artists who were part of the Dadaist movement, protesting against the First World War. The surrealists soon grasped this tool that lent itself to their exploration of consciousness and free association – with quite a few women as path breakers: Emila Medková, Claude Cahun, Dora Maar, and Hannah Höch. But the real surge of photomontage could be seen when first Russian constructivist artists applied it regarding issues of social justice and then the Neuer Deutscher Verlag (New German Press), run by Willi Münzenberg, committed itself to photomontage as a propaganda tool, most famously in its flagship periodical Die Arbeiter-Illustrierte Zeitung (or AIZ) (Worker’s Illustrated), which it began publishing in January 1925. By 1930, artist John Heartfield, clearly a model for Harley Gaber, began to contribute his intense montages to the AIZ, attracting yet more readers. The new art form had signaled its intentions: agit-prop.

In 1931, one of my favorite montage artists, César Domeal-Niewenhuis, curated the very first exhibition devoted solely to the new art form – Fotomontage – under the aegis of the Berliner Kunstbibliothek, in Berlin. Raoul Hausman opened the event, and the montages were displayed in sections divided between advertising and political art, with John Heartfield and the Bund revolutionärer bildender Künstler Deutschlands (The league of revolutionary German visual artists) dominating those exhibits. Experimental works by Lászlo Moholy-Nagy and Hannah Höch, among others, had their own corner. I do not know if Gaber saw the catalogue or was familiar with this work, but it likely would have resonated. A fascinating retrospective of the history of art during the Weimar Republic opened in Berlin at the Staatliche Kunsthalle in 1977 – Wem gehört die Welt: Kunst und Gesellschaft in der Weimarer Republik (Who owns the World: Art and Society in the Weimar Republic). It might have been an impetus for Gaber’s new dedication given that the exhibition focused on the ways in which the artists related to the people, how they attempted to contribute to changing the world and how those actions were received. The anti-war photomontage work of his U.S. contemporary, the brilliant Martha Rosler, devoted to exposing the failure of our political class to learn anything from history, might also have been of interest to him. We will never know.

Then again, the desire to create this monumental work might have come from a uniquely Jewish-American perspective trying to map the universal principles that emerge when humans embrace or are exposed to the maelstrom of ideology and desire for dominion. By deconstructing the specifics of that moment, or of the era that produced the horror, Gaber hoped, perhaps, to lay bare mechanisms that translate generally. As a humanist he certainly acknowledged the agency of human beings, respecting moral values, but was also quite aware that living up to our potential is contextually shaped.

***

Here the ten plagues will be enumerated, and it is a widespread—though not particularly old—custom to remove a drop of wine from the cup for each plague. This strange practice was explained to me, when I was still a boy, that wine is a symbol of joy, and because each plague caused our tormentors to suffer on our account, the joy over our own liberation is diminishedWhether this explanation may make claim to historical truth may remain unanswered, but one must recognize the poetic truth in it, because it breathes the spirit of Judaism.” Rabbi Eduard E. Baneth Der Sederabend: Ein Vortrag, (A Lecture on the Pesach Seder) published in Berlin in 1904.

ONE OF THE HIGHLIGHTS of the Passover Seder is the recitation of the plagues sent by G-d to punish the Egyptians who enslaved the Jews – that is if you share the table with young kids. With glee and abandon they dip their fingers, fling the drops of grape juice, yell the names of the afflictions, vermin among them. (Bonus: throwing the plastic frogs and locust used for decoration at each other.) The plagues seem far away, the threats averted. But much history is learned during this annual event, oral transmission linking generation after generation.

Harley Gaber did not grow up around a seder table, the household culturally Jewish, but he intuitively understood the role of children in societies that try to relate their history and, for some, keep their power hierarchies intact.

The montage display contains numerous single images of children and also groups them in ways that form more cohesive narratives. You have the (pre)-teens of the Hitler Youth right next to their Jewish age mates, ready for the trains to be transported. The uniforms of the Hitler Youth (an early unit of the Storm Troopers, mandatory participation for all youth) prepared for the soldierly character of the NSDAP, signified in-group membership, and conferred status. They had to be bought by the parents and many boys were keen on them, thinking it was cool. Children learn the values early, but also understand the power distribution, growing right into docile and willing soldiers, as long as they are not the bottom of the heap.

Top and bottom, after all, a major concept in fascistic thinking, which denies the truth that all of us are equal. In their twisted ways, race, religion, gender, sexuality, physical and mental health were markers of the hierarchy. The spatial word “unter” (below) an important suffix for power relations: there was the Untertan (imperial subject,) the Untergebene (subordinate) and eventually the Untermensch (subhuman), denying Jews and Roma their humanity.

One of the prominent texts in Gaber’s installation reads: “Wir fahren nach Polen um Juden zu versohlen.” (We’re traveling to Poland to give the Jews a good hiding.) The German verb is mostly used in the context of teachers beating their students, something children could easily comprehend. Now they weren’t the targets, but someone else was. It was not just the teaching that violent persecution of minorities was ideologically justified. Children learned early on that hatred, anger or resentment – the whole range of anti-humanistic feelings – were acceptable and even desirable, as long as they found their targets in convenient scape goats. Rote expression of loyalty in these paramilitary youth camps eventually turned to the real thing. Belonging felt good, de- individuation in those group settings eased remaining conscience.

Wir fahren nach Polen um Juden zu versohlen

Parallel to spending afternoons and evenings in these organizations (divided by age groups and gender,) indoctrination became part of the school day as well. It was not just what was NOT allowed to be read or learned, (book banning, anyone?) but importantly how curricula and instruction materials were centrally under the complete control of the party apparatus, as were the hiring and firing of (dis)loyal teachers and professors. Education was no longer geared towards the development of personality and learning, but forced the kids to put on mental blinders, uncritically digesting what was offered, a reduction to the atavistic stages of development. I see Harley Gaber’s work as enormously prescient in that the indoctrination of youth, so prominently displayed in his montages, is to be feared, and easily accomplished when education becomes usurped by those in power and ideologically or religiously driven. We see it, here and now.

***

“The purpose of art is to lay bare the questions that have been hidden by the answers.” – James Baldwin, The Price of the Ticket: Collected Nonfiction, 1948-1985

GABER’S INSIGHT about the interconnectedness of a nation’s strata can be found in his depictions of ordinary Germans going about their lives in union with the rising fascists, as well as conservative politicians, who engaged in Faustian bargains with the Nazi representatives in order to hold on to power. At least that was my interpretation, thinking that perhaps one of the photographs portrayed Kurt von Schleicher, the last chancellor of the Weimar Republic, eager to keep oversight over the military and appeasing his rival Hitler, eventually murdered by the Nazis during the Night of the Long Knives.

Top row, 6th panel from the left – portrait of someone reminding me of von Schleicher.

We often forget that during the rise of radical forces more moderate political parties are willing to form alliances with them in order to achieve or stay in power, with the strong belief, if one is generously speculating, that they might keep them in check and under influence within their power arrangements.(A good introduction to this topic can be found here.) That certainly was the case with Hindenburg and Hitler, or Emperor Emanuel and Mussolini, catastrophic miscalculations, both.

Just looking at the current gubernatorial race in Oregon, we have reports that one of the candidate has tied herself to “multiple far-right extremists, including a militia leader, a financial backer of the January 6th insurrection, and a Q-Anon conspiracy theorist.” Another one is reported to have sought the endorsement of the Timber Unit, a group full of extremists, and accepted their award.  She lamented to The New York Times: ‘You can see the deterioration of the beautiful City of Roses, now the city of roaches.’ Some people have interpreted that as a de-humanizing reference to Portland’s many unhoused people (a claim denied by the candidate), and a dog whistle to the far right that calls them pests. Roaches. Pest. Plague.

It is not only politicians, though. When celebrities, like Kanye West this week, spout unequivocally anti-Semitic statements on Twitter to their 30 million followers (there are roughly 14.8 million Jews alive) and are welcomed to the platform by the richest man in the world in short succession, it opens more space for resonance for poisonous beliefs and strengthens those who already agree. In Germany, 36.000 people marched in the state of Thuringia alone, at the beginning of October, called by the AfD to protest political conditions, with far-right extremists joined by many ordinary citizens in fear of deteriorating economic conditions due to the war in Ukraine and other political decisions around immigration and environmental protection. When right-wing extremists take to the streets together with the supposedly “middle class,” when there are no longer any fears of contact, the citizenry acts like a sounding box for the Neo-Nazis, amplifying the message. It normalizes anti-democratic positions. Harley Gaber warned us.

***

Memory, the mind’s power of having present what is irrevocably past and thus absent from the senses, has always been the most plausible paradigmatic example of the mind’s power to make invisibles present.” –Hanna Arendt, The Life of the Mind (1977)

HARLEY GABER’S PHOTOMONTAGES attempted to make the invisible present through creative juxtapositions. He was keenly aware that only testimony, in this case a visual, constructed epic, can keep the past and its lessons alive. In that way, this installation could not be more timely for Jewish museums and institutions in a day and age where the memory of the living is receding, given that the last survivors of the Holocaust are passing on. Memory can only be kept maintained, if we transmit it, true for German and U.S. history of fascism alike. We owe a debt of gratitude to individuals as well as organizations who engage in that task.

From left to right: Melissa Martens Yaverbaum, Steve Gaber, Harley’s brother, Christina Ankofska. Harley Gaber installing one of his panels. photo on right courtesy Christina Ankofska.

After Gaber’s death, his friend Dan Epstein, President of the Epstein Family Foundation that sponsors this exhibition, and Steve Rees, a close friend of the Gaber family, organized the preservation of the work. Much time and resources went into digitizing, cataloguing and storage of 4.200 (!) montages (the 390 on exhibition are a subset based on prior selections by the artist.) This will enormously help curations of this body of work in the future.

Alerted by an article in the NYT about new and diverse approaches to Holocaust and genocide education at Jewish museums, Epstein and Rees (the co-manager of the project) approached a number of them to discuss the possibility of exhibiting Gaber’s work. OJMCHE, under the leadership of Judy Margles, decided to host the project. Margles was able to secure the talents of Melissa Martens Yaverbaum, Executive Director of the Council of American Jewish Museums (CAJM) to act as guest curator who extended the scope of the project beyond the photomontage work. You will find interesting materials that allow glimpses of the musician and philosopher as well. Yaverbaum, in turn, received support from Gaber’s brother Steve and Harley’s former partner Christina Ankofska in exploring the art and life of Gaber.

Christina had accompanied Gaber on one of his research trips to Germany, and was present for much of his work creating his montages and preparing them for one of the few exhibits he lived to see. She told me a story that she thought encapsulated his humanism, as much a part of him as were his visionary and creative talents. They left the installation of Die Plage in L.A. (LA Times review from the year 2000 here,) long after midnight, starving. Miraculously they came upon a hot dog cart, amidst a group of unhoused people. Gaber decided: “Hotdogs for all!” and they found themselves happily gorging in famished company now generously treated in the early morning hours. A Mensch, in other words, whose memory should be a blessing. It is up to us to keep his memory and that of all who perished under fascist rule, alive. Gaber’s montages will be of great assistance in that effort.

Memorial marker at the concentration camp Buchenwald memorial site. Part of the inscription for the victims, women and girls in this case, reads: “But you live as long as other humans keep you in their memory.” Many other markers are spread across the site for specific groups of victims. NON OMNIS MORIAR – I shall not wholly die. Photo Friderike Heuer

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Harley Gaber: Die Plage

October 7, 2022 – January 29, 2023

OREGON JEWISH MUSEUM AND CENTER FOR HOLOCAUST EDUCATION
724 NW Davis Street
Portland, OR 97209

Wednesday – Sunday: 11am – 4pm

We Owe it to Them

In memory of all those who knew to accept the suffering and death with courage and dignity.

This plaque hangs on the wall of the Holocaust museum at the site of the former Concentration Camp Risiera de San Sabba, in Trieste, Italy. I don’t have to tell you why I am thinking about it and all the other impressions gained during my last visit to Italy in 2018. We owe the victims of fascism to sound the alarm.

I am not sure what is worse, the outcome of this weekend’s Italian elections, with historically low participation due to bad weather as much as disillusionment by younger voters who stayed home, or the white-washing of the result we see in the international media. The right-wing bloc composed of the far-right Fratelli d’Italia (FdI), the right-wing Lega and the centre-right Forza Italia performed as predicted, with FdI leader Giorgia Meloni likely to become the next prime minister.

Meloni is a true heir to Mussolini, and no claims of “post-fascism, breaking the glass ceiling as a woman, she is no tyrant, nothing much will change for Italy since they always vote out those who underperform,” or any of the other softening assurances can hide the factual truth: the Italian voters opted for a self-proclaimed fascist, surrounded by other extremists and abetted by a center-right coalition that wanted power. I think the worst statements for me were by those who had always insisted that there is no chance for a revival of fascism (in Europe or elsewhere) and then, seeing the results, refer to the democratic process that led to right-wing power, essentially saying: “Deal with it.”

In her acceptance speech Meloni used anti-Semitic dogwhistles about refusing to be slaves to international financiers. Yesterday she proclaimed that she considers banning same-sex couples from adopting children, and possibly dissolving same-sex couples’ legal parentage over the children they’ve already adopted. Her program includes disappearing the Sinti and Roma from the street, guarded camps for illegal migrants, incarceration of leftist, and destroying the union offices. Here is an in-depth description of her rise to power and her goals.

In general, Italy is the Western country that has suffered the most severe and prolonged economic decline over the last decades other than Greece. There has been a severe downslide since the 1980s. Italians are earning less in real terms than they did in the 1990s, and large number of scientists and others in the STEM field have left the country due to lack of support. The resulting lack of development and economic stagnation is one of the key conditions that we know leads to people embracing political extremes.

Bread for the Poor

The Italian left has been fighting against each other instead of forging a coalition that would have provided a chance to garner enough votes. It is also the case that the Italian roots of fascism have not been historically worked through, in contrast to, say, Germany, which has tried to analyze and understand the causes for the catastrophe the nation unleashed on the world. Italian voters might have opted for change, rather than the ideology underlying Meloni’s power book. But that does not solve the problem that once in power, these ideologies can quickly turn the world into chaos. Particularly when they are part of an international alliance that mutually reinforces each other, with Victor Urban and Steve Bannon, for example, being declared allies of Meloni.

Trieste itself has a complex history, a place apart under various occupiers, and one that had a complicated relationship with its Slovenian neighbors and part-time occupiers, with lots of anti- Slav sentiment held up to today, as part of a general anti-immigrant movement that the FdI stoked and exploited. The town and harbor were a pivotal part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, a link between Italy, Central Europe and the Balkans. There were violent liberation movements at the beginning of the 20th century, and the US and Britains who controlled Trieste after WW II only gave it back to Italy in 1954, when they were sure it would not fall in then Communist Yugoslavia’s hand.

Trieste was a magnet for intellectuals, with James Joyce, who lived and wrote here for years, still reigning supreme on the literary tourist circuit, next to Italo Svevo. Their commemorative busts have recently gotten dubious company: in 2019 the city erected a statue of Gabriel d’Annunzio, a nationalist who openly inspired fascism and is claimed as a hero by the extreme right. Last year, Trieste was a hotbed of Covid-deniers and demonstrations against vaccination. As a consequence, the city suffered a large number of infected and a serious crisis at the local hospitals.

Historically the city was a symbolically crucial site for Italian nationalism as a laboratory and showcase for fascism, with new buildings erected on a massive scale and fascist agitators shipped in from other parts of the country to encourage the movement’s development there in the 1930s. The central part of the town is a tourist hub, with loads of visitors from cruise ships roaming the small streets and large plazas; the neighborhoods up the hills get quickly less picturesque, with poverty visible in the outskirts.

Mussolini himself visited in September 1938 and announced in a rousing speech, delivered at the Piazza Unità, the promulgation of the racial laws.

He sanctioned the complete expulsion of Jewish citizens from civil society. In 1943, he was toppled after the successful Allied invasion of southern Italy, but the northern half of the country was now occupied by its Nazi “allies.”

Trieste and the province of Fruili became part of the Reich, forcibly tugged back into their pre-1918 alignment with central Europe. It was the Nazis who converted an urban rice processing plant, the Risiera di San Sabba, into a transit camp, with indications that it was also intended from the start as a death camp, the only one actually inside an Italian city, within earshot of the population. Ovens designed for drying rice provided a ready-made infrastructure for a new, grimmer, purpose.

Prisoners held at San Sabba – some to die there, some on their way to other camps across occupied Europe – ranged from local Jews to people with learning disabilities to other members of the area’s resistance to fascism, including the writers Boris Pahor and Giani Stuparich. In charge of the camp was one of Austria’s most notorious Nazis: Odilo Globočnik, the man responsible for the liquidation of the Warsaw Ghetto and the beginning of the ethnic cleansing of Poland, among numerous other appalling crimes.(Ref.)

Here are some photographs from the memorial site – the sculpture in the right upper corner stands in place of the crematorium chimney. The torture cells were directly adjacent to those housing the inmates, leaving them exposed to the screams that would soon be their own. The majority of over 5000 deaths were cause by beatings. Beaten to death, yes. Some prisoners were shot. The neighborhood was directly adjacent, the population fully aware of what was happening. Many of those neighbors and other collaborators of the Nazis were killed and thrown into mass graves in ravines of the area by Tito and his partisans who sought revenge for the thousands of killed Slavs after 1945. The region has clearly experienced the horrors and consequences unleashed by fascism. And yet.

In last week’s elections, the Trieste region voted for the right wing bloc (FdI, League and Forza) by close to 50%.

We can’t despair, but we can’t ignore the developments either. Here is the partisans’ song.

Note to Self: The strength of right wing movements in Hungary, Sweden, and now Italy (and potentially in our own country come election time) should propel us to examine the link between fascism and capitalism. Can’t do that in the framework of a blog, alas. But will write about the stages of fascism next time.

Renewal.

Join me on a walk? Take your rubber boots – the Pineapple Express has arrived, an atmospheric river that transports moisture from the tropics to the northern areas of the planet in great masses. In simpler words: it has been pouring.

And this is the foot path …..

I needed to get out yesterday to get away from the news, so many horrors all at once. Nobody able to predict what will happen next, how to approach a situation where the unchecked power over weapons destroys lives, a people, potentially the world as we know it. The reactions in favor of greater militarization in Europe are understandable but go so against the grain of what a nation – Germany – has tried to do for decades in acknowledgement of its history. All of a sudden there are billions available to fill the coffers of the weapons industry, when poverty and houselessness and lack of social services are unabated. Let me hasten to add, I do not have a clue what the right thing is to do, with the stakes so insane. And I do understand that you cannot defend yourself against unlawful, imperialistic military invasion with bare hands.

Much mud carried by the fast stream

The refugee situation is raising ambiguous feelings as well. It is great how hundreds of thousands of fleeing Ukrainians are welcomed in neighboring nations. It is horrifying that people of color have been treated very differently, not just in general (think Polish treatment of Syrian refugees) but in this particular instance – Black and Brown students studying in Ukraine not allowed across the borders, pushed out of trains and busses, humans of a second order. The internet is full of suggestions that Africans make it immediately to Romania which is set for flights to Ghana, Nigeria and Zimbabwe.

And then there is the situation of the Jews whose fate is so tied to the history of Ukraine, the unspeakable terror against them during WW II, whose Holocaust memorial at Babyn Yar has been bombed by Putin yesterday. Their status as refugees, outside of Israel, has been a double edged sword. Or even within Israel – it is the occupied West Bank that will house the influx of Jewish Ukrainians, complicating things for the Palestinians.

I was thinking back to an essay describing the experiences and difficulties of Eastern European Jews emigrating to Germany in the 1990s when Germany accepted a contingent of Jewish refugees to polish its own image, to signal repentance of past deeds.

I also remembered Hannah Arendt’s words, so applicable to the moment. In the link, her short essay We Refugees is printed in full after her portrait.

Windfall

But lest we forget, there are also people in Russia whose life will take a devastating turn as we speak, who have few choices for protest or action to change what is decreed from above. Here is a short essay from 2 days ago by a young Russian Jew who is grieving.

And then there is a novel about a survivor of another war in Ukraine, that comforts us with a tale of resilience. Here is an excerpt of Kurkov’s Grey Bees.

Nature on my walk pretended that nothing had happened. Ignored the fact that it was so warm that everything seemed to explode in growth spurts several weeks early. An unstoppable push towards renewal.

A few of the small birds were happily chirping along, including a female ruby crowned kinglet, a miracle to catch with the camera since they move at lightning speed. (Below are Towhee, song sparrows, a female junko, killdeer and the kinglet.)

The geese did their thing, coming and going.

The wild currants joined the chorus of plants in a landscape that defiantly put up some color against the grey sky.

As did the rest of the flowering beauty:

The pussy willows, in different stages of growth, seemed to suggest that tears can be beautiful adornment, and that they will roll off by themselves – well, my mind prone to anthropomorphising suggested that, but I did not complain….

Spring is all about renewal. Renewal is also humanity’s highest good, enshrined in democracies who are willing to take risks, accept the unpredictable, renounce the statism that aristocracies or authoritarian regimes want to enshrine. Renewal is about a livable future, not an oppressive past. It is upon everyone of us to support that project of renewal, within and beyond our borders.

When the rain got too hard I found a shelter, and some earlier visitor had left something behind. At least the kids here can still assume that nothing has happened and engage their fairy worlds. Wish it was true for every child in the world.

Here is Ukrainian composer Lysenko.

Kristallnacht, 2020

Yesterday, November 9th, marked the anniversary of Kristallnacht, a date when Germany and Jews around the world commemorate the November progrom(s) against Jews carried out by SA paramilitary forces and civilians throughout Nazi Germany in 1938. Synagogues, shops, apartments were set on fire, destroyed, looted, their Jewish inhabitants beaten, abducted or killed.

Berlin Jewish Cemetery

Germany’s President Steinmeier and Chancellor Merkel offered the usual speeches yesterday, a perennial calling for rigorous action against anti-Semitism. Steinmeier said he was ashamed in light of the recent multiple attacks on Jews, ashamed that they did not feel free to wear Kipot in public, and grateful that “German administrative offices took their responsibility seriously by adding police protection to synagogues and pursuing antisemitic crimes to the fullest extent of the law.” Hmmmm.

This on the same day, when a public commemoration of Kristallnacht in Dresden, usually an annual event, was prohibited with reference to Covid-19, but a demonstration by neo-Nazi forces, many of them Holocaust deniers, with an invited extremist speaker, was permitted. The local Jewish community was outraged. Here is a report (with google translator, hopefully somewhat true to the original.)

Organizational Structure of the SS, in memorial exhibition

Anti-semitism does, of course, not stick to borders. Only a week ago Jewish graves were once again defaced in this country, this time in Grand Rapids, Michigan, smeared with Trump and MAGA slogans. It was one of many openly hateful acts that have increased in frequency and intensity through the years of the Trump administration.

Here is the strange thing, though: a lot of Jews were voting for Trump according to polls, and many more this year compared to 2016. This according to data coming from the AP poll published in the NYT and a poll commissioned by the Republican Jewish Commission and the Jewish Electoral Institute. In Florida alone, Trump got around 150.000 Jewish votes. Nationally, Jewish Orthodox voters went for Trump by a 70 to 19 margin!

To each his own – front door at concentration camp Buchenwald

If you look at all Jewish voters combined, Biden scored a 69 to 30 margin over Trump, but received the lowest total vote by Jewish voters in almost 4o years, while Trump’s numbers are the best for a Republican for the same time span. Clearly the American Jewish community has split into factions that can no longer be seen as having more in common than what divides them. Liberal Jews do believe Trump presented a clear and present danger with his openings toward autocratic if not fascistic tendencies, while the remaining third believed no such thing and celebrated him as Israel’s best friend.

Concentration camp Ravensbrück

As they say, divide and conquer. Some people quietly rubbing their hands and longing for future Kristallnächte. In the meantime, they’ll go and vandalize cemeteries.

Berlin Holocaust Memorial

Let’s end on an optimistic note, though. Many, many righteous people headed the calls of the organization that has by now placed over 70.000 stumbling stones across Europe, commemorating the names, locations, death or survival dates of persecuted Jews and other Nazi victims,

calls to polish them before they fade into oblivion. Across countries, regions, cities, towns and village, people went out to scrub the markers.

Photographs today are from my various visits to European memorials. A bit of difficult music by a Jewish composer, appropriate to the topic, though. If you need a smile, read the comments under the video. Someone will have expressed some of your very own sentiment.

The Holocaust Memorial, San Francisco.

All you see is a male torso seemingly looking out from behind barbed wire, when you approach on foot. No signs, no pointers, just a ghostly white figure looking across the street.

Depending on your viewing angle his hand looks ambiguously as if about to grip the barbed wire, or is beckoning you for a closer look.

Look I did. Walking slowly up the hill, reading the plaques and then confronting the memorial in its full configuration: 11 bodies splayed across the cement floor, in a haphazard, star-shaped pile. The sole survivor of the fascist murder turning his back to his sisters and brothers, watching a world go by behind the fence that is oblivious to the memory.

Or not. Some want that the memory itself ceases to exist. Last year every single household in the neighborhood of the Lincoln Park memorial received anti-Semitic hate mail that contained extremist Holocaust denialism and conspiracy theories about Jews, and enclosed a reading list recommending titles such as “The Hoax of the Twentieth Century” and “Treblinka: Extermination Camp or Transit Camp?” It was sent from Washington D.C. by the Barnes Review, a neo-fascistic organization, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center, and deemed one of the most virulent anti-Semitic groups in the nation.

The Holocaust Memorial was installed in 1984, created by George Segal in bronze and covered in his signature chalky white patina. Here are his own words about his motivation to create the sculpture after an initial refusal, from a review in the NYT in the early 80s.

The star like ordering of the corpses needs no further explanation. The standing survivor is supposed to be modeled after a famous photograph by Margaret Bourke-White of the liberation of Buchenwald.

My surprise at the spotless appearance of the figures, exposed to the elements for almost 40 years and to frequent acts of vandalism – you can go right into the display and walk among them, with no guards on site – was quickly explained.

About a year ago the sculpture underwent some major restoration. This February, it was officially reopened, with a talk by Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, the chief curator of the core exhibition at Polin Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw and professor emerita at New York University, who serves on advisory boards for Jewish museums in Vienna, Berlin and Moscow.

The restored version has much less fence than what I saw in older photographs, and the survivor in his white Kittel is no longer having his hand in the barbed wire. I wonder what happened. Overall, though, the installation is haunting, fulfilling its original mandate to raise awareness about the Holocaust. A timely task, you’ll agree, in light of the anti-Semitic sentiments raising their ugly heads in this country without shame once again.

Liberation Day

Last Saturday, April 25, 2020 marked the 75th anniversary of Italy’s Liberation from the Italian Fascists and Nazi occupation of World War II. Lots of remembrances, celebration and photographs of members of the Italian resistance in the news, often accompanied by renditions of Bella Ciao, the communist partisan song used by the Resistance (before the music got ridiculously usurped by Money Heist, the movie.)

Risiera di San Sabba, Trieste, Italy
Archival photograph

By chance I came across some remarks by Maaza Mengiste, an Ethiopian – American writer, Fulbright scholar and social justice activist. Mengiste published her second novel, The Shadow King, last year to rave reviews. I have not yet read it, but have moved it up on my to-be-read-list when I encountered Mengiste’s thoughts around Liberation Day.

The book is set in 1935 during the Italo-Ethiopian war with Mussolini invading Addis-Abbeba, the precursor to World War II. It focusses on the role of women in war, their ability to fight while being subjected to various forms of oppression. The shadow king of the title is a look-alike of Haile Selassi, who is shown from afar to the Ethiopian soldiers to give them courage and remind them of their duty to sacrifice. All this while the real king sits in exile in Bath, England, running out of money and existing on charity for himself and his entourage.

At its core, say the reviews, is the role memory plays in our understanding and interpretation of history. The way we want to or do remember, just as much as the way we intend to forget those aspects of history that don’t fit into our narrative (be that the narrative of victims, or heroes.) (All this sounds dry, but it was one of Times books of the year….and people say you can’t put it down once you start it.)

*

The complexity of memory culture was only part of the remarks that I picked up by Mengiste on Sunday. A lot of her research in preparation for the book concerned the relationship between the racial segregation laws that were established in Ethiopia, Somalia, Eritrea and Libya, and Italy’s anti-semitic laws that took effect a year later, in 1938. Mengiste considers bigotry as the shared source for the scourges of colonialism and anti-Semitism. And she celebrated the commemoration of the acts of those courageous resistance fighters who put an end to Mussolini’s reign. As one should.

What resonated was her description of the Italian concentration camp Risiera di San Sabba where some of the Jewish soldiers who had fought as Italians and massacred Ethiopeans during the invasion of Ethiopia, and their families, were imprisoned only a few years later before being sent off to Auschwitz. It was the only camp in Italy where people were killed and then cremated, most of those political prisoners. (Photos today from the memorial.)

“I felt in the presence of ghosts,”Mengiste reports. So did I. A short account of my visit two years ago can be found here.

After reading up on the history the Risiera it became clear that the Italians have some of the same problems around public memory of political darkness as do Germans, independent of the formers’ dedicated resistance. Risiera di San Sabba began its life as a contested site of memory almost immediately after the war’s end, in 1945, when the Communist Counsel on the Liberation of Trieste organized a ceremony at the Risiera that established it as “an icon of the Communist resistant.” In 1965, when the site became a national monument, it was reframed as a site of memory for the anti-Communist wartime resistance. In 1975, the ceremonies accompanying the resurrection of the Risiera memorial emphasized the sacrifice of all victims, describing all as war heroes. The ahistorical nature of these narratives meant that there was no differentiation between victims of racial persecution and political persecution (The carnage done to Yugoslav partisans was omitted.)

After the 1976 war crimes trial in Trieste, the site of the Risiera was used to perpetuate an anti-Communist narrative that emphasized the deportation of Jewish prisoners to death camps in Germany and Poland and portrayed Yugoslav partisans as “non-innocent” victims. In other words, the trial contributed to the image of Italians as contributing only minimally to the maintenance of the camp and to the atrocities committed there. (I learned all this here.)

What I really want to say: it is not all black and white, good and bad, perpetrators and victims. Decisions about who is victim and deserves remembrance and who is not emerge when nations try to justify their actions. The fact of resistance by some also does not wipe out the fact of collaboration by many others. Which is of course a lesson some Germans are still trying to figure out while others are attempting to whitewash much that has occurred. In the meantime all power to those who resisted fascism! May they be remembered forever.

And why Aida as today’s musical choice? Haile Selassi is said to have listened to Aida in the years of exile in Bath. And I’m a sucker for Verdi, in any event.

Yom Hashoa 2020

Monday will be Holocaust Remembrance Day. Since words fail me, 75 years after the liberation of Auschwitz, I’ll add up some numbers. In no particular order.

40% – of German students under age 14 do not know that Auschwitz was a death camp

34% – of Germans between the ages of 18 and 34 say they know little about the Holocaust.

57% – of all French respondents and 69% of Millennials and Gen Z do not know that six million Jews were killed during the Holocaust. ( Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany survey results.)

43% – of Americans know that Adolf Hitler became chancellor of Germany through a democratic political process. (More than half don’t, in other words.) And a similar share (45%) know that approximately 6 million Jews were killed in the Holocaust. Nearly three-in-ten Americans say they are not sure how many Jews died during the Holocaust, while one-in-ten overestimate the death toll, and 15% say that 3 million or fewer Jews were killed. Numbers sourced from the study below.

 1,879attacks against Jews and Jewish institutions across the country in 2018, including the Pittsburgh murders. The numbers have gone up since 2018.

1 – German president allowed to give a memorial speech this year at Yad Vashem

1 – Pope condems the barbaric resurgence of anti-Semitism

1 – White House gives media credentials again to a website that called impeachment a Jew Coup.

1Prime Minister who exploits the Holocaust for political and personal gain.

700 – scholars and students protest the firing of the entire library stand at the Yiddish Institute YIVO.

1 – Jewish museum in Portland where you can learn so much more: http://www.ojmche.org

Photographs today from an old series of mine The Defiance in their Faces with themes around the fascistic rule of Germany.

In 1944, Dmitri Shostakovich completed his Piano Trio No 2, in memory of his close friend and mentor Ivan Sollertinsky. The third movement’s solemn structure is contrasted by Jewish themes in the fourth movement. News of the death camps had been reaching Moscow by this point, and the composer was also completing the score of Rothschild’s Violin, a work written by his pupil Veniamin Fleyshman, who had been killed in the siege of Leningrad in 1941. (Holocaust music.ort.org)

It’s just rowdy youth, they say

It’s just rowdy youth was a typical commentary found in some Austrian media in light of the news that an art project honoring Holocaust survivors was defaced and destroyed over the last couple of days in Vienna. German-Italian photographer Luigi Toscano had erected 80 larger-than-life portraits of Holocaust survivors, an exhibit called Lest We Forget, opened recently by Austrian’s President Van Bellen.

Photo credit:DPA

Many of these faces were slashed by knives, some had antisemitic slurs and swastikas written all over them.

The portraits are large, 8 ft tall, and printed onto gauzy, water-repellent material. The exhibit has been shown in San Francisco and other places without incidents, while one version that is currently up in Germany has police protection. So does every single Jewish institution from daycare centers to schools to synagogues in Germany, according to Chancellor Merkel who was interviewed about the matter after the government agent responsible for anti-Semitism had announced last Saturday that Jews should not always be wearing kippot in public because it has become unsafe. As a response to this warning the German government suggested that all German citizens should go out in public with skull caps to show solidarity. A lot of good it will do….

Certainly the Austrian police will not follow this call for solidarity. They did not even show up when the vandalism was reported originally and the artist called to have the perpetrators pursued. “It’s just property damage.” Yes, let’s pretend there is no political context during a week where the Austrian Neo-Nazi Vice Chancellor Strache had to resign amidst scandal (a secret taping of his pre-election discussions with a presumed Russian agent to exchange favors for help.) A resignation that extended to cabinet members, a vote of no confidence for Chancellor Kurz, and new elections slated for September. The whole sordid story here.

Before we descend into complete gloom, however, there is also good news. Muslim citizens came to protect the images, artist collectives guarded them overnight, and a group of young people brought sewing kits and repaired the slashed surfaces. And at the beginning of this month Timothy Snyder (a Yale historian who specializes in the study of the Holocaust) delivered a remarkable speech at the Viennese Judenplatz on the occasion of Europe Day 2019. If you have time and inclination, it’s truly worth a read.

Photographs are from the old Jewish section of the Zentral Friedhof in Vienna. It has fallen into terrible disrepair, with waving fields of stinging nettles, roaming deer, and only an occasional sign that someone still comes to visit.

Music is by the quintessential Viennese composer Schubert. This, his very last sonata, was called by someone a message from the dead to the living if there ever was one.

Lest we forget.

Ways to remember

Yesterday was Holocaust Remembrance Day, and my inbox was filled with a frightful variety of reminders. Much of it from Germany which takes its memorial duty seriously, with renewed effort, it looks like, given how NeoNazism raises its ugly head.

Many individuals tweeted about signs in their neighborhoods of crimes past – and present – with a shared warning: Wehret den Anfängen – Nip things in the bud.

Stumbling blocks in a 200 m radius of my apartment. Never forget. Nip it in the bud.

Organizations insisted that government representatives of the far-right AfD party were NOT welcome a memorial events, given that they had walked out when the former president of the Jewish Council gave a speech on the Holocaust in parliament.

Foundation Buchenwald (concentration camp) will not tolerate AfD participants.

Politicians warned: Memorial culture is under attack from the extreme Right (Heiko Maas, German minister of foreign affairs.)

Editorials stressed our vulnerability to hatred and the correspondent need to educate, again and again, about the tenets of democracy.

No commemoration is immutable, nothing deemed certain is safe. Democracy and enlightenment, the rule of law, respect for minorities are all something that must be learned, over and over again.

And how did world leaders commemorate the day? Chancellor Angela Merkel called on every single citizen to help fight anti-Semitism. Prime minister Theresa May visits Holocaust Educational Trust. Trudeau apologizes for inaction and apathy during the Nazi era. And our very own? Tweets something out in the afternoon and spews misleading anti-immigrant hate message some minutes later.

In line with Malaysia’s prime minister who would not allow hook-nosed  Israeli athletes to partake in the paralympics swimming event. (Malaysia is now banned from hosting it.https://www.haaretz.com/world-news/asia-and-australia/malaysia-stripped-of-hosting-paralympics-championship-over-ban-of-israelis-1.6875420

Closer to home you have Jewish museums call for remembrance, including our very own.

And you have fearful reports on the increase of anti-Semitic hate crimes and an analysis of what underlies them, hate contagion, here:

http://gothamist.com/2019/01/22/swastikas_hate_crime_nyc.php?fbclid=IwAR0uE82ALI2T99Gx8YUW5GwKyXvBJxfe-XyF7eHH_nqDL_TkEbpIrpjFSFA

What moved me most, was a continued stream of images from the St. Louis Manifest: the names of those ship passengers who were returned by the US to face their death in German concentration camps.

Brigitte on her first day of school, holding the traditional cone of sweets given to first graders.

What made me think the hardest was an editorial from Germany (I am summarizing some excerpts): the author is worried that Holocaust remembrance has become a calcified ritual. Speeches in parliament by representatives of the victims, eloquent survivors or smart professors that try to appeal to our conscience, are followed by sad violin sonatas and wreath laying at the graves.

And then modern Germany takes a Selfie against the background of a horrid past that we have “worked through.” He then goes on to describe what is unfolding not just in Germany but worldwide, a turn to authoritarianism that rejects the lessons of the past and insists on minimizing the horror – if not existence – of the Holocaust. His conclusion: Auschwitz doesn’t help to prevent Auschwitz. It takes more than that.

http://www.spiegel.de/kultur/gesellschaft/holocaust-gedenken-auschwitz-hilft-nicht-auschwitz-zu-verhindern-a-1250169.html

Music is a different piece of violin music, energizing to fight, by our very own Portland composer David Schiff whose music is deeply rooted in the Jewish canon.

http://site-323590.bcvp0rtal.com/detail/video/5349798285001/david-schiff-4-sisters:-concerto-for-jazz-violin-and-orchestra


Learning from History

He who shall not be named tweeted something along the lines of ” there will ALWAYS be walls and ALWAYS be wheels” in recent days. The statement relies on the notion that there is something inevitable, like a law of nature or a law of history that will happen or will continue to happen regardless of our political aspirations.

The assumption of immutable forces were at the root of totalitarian movements, the law of history for Stalin, the law of nature for Hitler. As Hannah Arendt put it (and I paraphrase to my best ability) the ideology underlying totalitarianism assumes that there are inevitable necessities ruling the course of history. These can be laws of race or class, but they are immune to individual desires or political goals. You can either act in accordance with those necessities, or you’ll be swept aside by the forces of history.

https://www.wallstein-verlag.de/9783835331921-hannah-arendt-the-modern-challenge-to-tradition-fragmente-eines-buchs.html

In a truly totalitarian society that ideology is supplemented by terror which tries to eradicate any aspect of human freedom and divergent thought. We are certainly not at this point. But I think it is important to realize that people who have lost a sense of community, a sense of predictability in their world when threatened with a decline in status or loss of what’s familiar, are open to ideologies that relieve them of a sense of (failed) responsibility of their own fate. They are open to totalitarian organizations that make them feel part of inevitable history rather than superfluous human beings. What will be, will be, no use resisting. So, enjoy the ride (sounds like a familiar tweet as well, doesn’t it?)

State-organized terror might not be on for us right now, but it did happen in history, as we know. And being reminded of it helps us to be forearmed, or so one hopes. Usually museums and memorials do that for us. We visit them, however, only on occasion. Perhaps it’s better to make reminders of the consequences of terror more visible in our every day life. In Berlin, for example, a project, Places of Remembrance, by Renata Stih and Frieder Schnock put signs on street lamp posts which depict images of daily scenes and profession on one side and display condensed versions of anti-Jewish Nazi regulations passed between 1933 and 1945 on the reverse side. They remind us of shared human experiences before people were divided into those allowed to live and those violently put to death. All in keeping with an ideology that “necessitated” pure blood lines. I wonder what the equivalent might look like in this country.

Description and images from that art project are in the link above.

My photographs today are of Berlin and its Jewish memorials.

Music: Dies Irae from Verdi’s Requiem –

and a documentary/concert performance for those who have more time to watch, recalling the requiem being performed at Theresienstadt concentration camp.

http://site-323590.bcvp0rtal.com/detail/videos/new-on-dso-replay/video/5430233815001/defiant-requiem:-verdi-at-terez%C3%ADn?autoStart=true