In the Eyes of the Beholder: The Complexion of the Shoah in the Lublin District
In the Eyes of the Beholder: The Complexion of the Shoah in the Lublin District
Author(s): David SilberklangSubject(s): Labor relations, Studies in violence and power, Fascism, Nazism and WW II, History of the Holocaust, Film / Cinema / Cinematography, History of Antisemitism, History of Art
Published by: SAGE Publications Ltd
Keywords: Lublin; Bełżec; Grajer; Talmud; complexion;
Summary/Abstract: The article addresses sources for understanding the complexion of the Shoah in Poland, through a focus on the Lublin District and Jewish forced labor there. From the opening story of the wedding of Shamai Grajer and Mina Fiszman in Lublin on April 17, 1942, the article extrapolates several central themes: two constants in Nazi policies and Jewish experience—forced population movements and forced labor, the behavior of the various actors involved in the story, and sources. The main individuals involved in the opening story highlight these subjects. Fiszman was a refugee deported in February 1940 from Stettin. Grajer, Fiszman, and Rabbi Zvi Elimelech Talmud, who performed the wedding, had all been selected as forced laborers when the majority of the Jewish community was murdered during the previous month, and they hoped that their labor would help them survive. The behavior of the main German actors in the story, Harry Sturm and Hermann Worthoff, was not uniformly evil, and the behavior of the Jewish actors was not uniformly “heroic.” The Bełżec forced labor complex in 1940 highlights the brutality and murderousness of much of the early forced labor in Poland. Yet, during the deportations to death in 1942 the Jews needed to “unlearn” the lessons of avoiding such labor if they were now to have a hope of surviving. Among the varied sources for this and the subsequent subjects addressed in the article, the Jewish sources provide a sense of what actually happened in these camps and situations.
Journal: East European Politics and Societies
- Issue Year: 34/2020
- Issue No: 01
- Page Range: 143-157
- Page Count: 15
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF