Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - Live

Rare photos from WWII Jewish ghetto shown in Warsaw

- Agence France-Presse

WARSAW: Never-before-seen photos of the Warsaw Ghetto from a roll of film shot by a Polish firefighte­r under the noses of the occupying Germans were unveiled to journalist­s on Wednesday.

Although taken during the 1943 Warsaw Ghetto uprising when Jews rose up against the Nazi occupiers, they do not depict the actual fighting.

But they do show apocalypti­c scenes of buildings on fire, deserted streets strewn with rubble, and German soldiers escorting Jews to their deaths.

Recently discovered in an attic, the photos will go on show to the public in the Polish capital in April on the 80th anniversar­y of the uprising.

“Photos taken by Germans constitute the quasi-majority of the photograph­ic documentat­ion of the Holocaust,” historian

Jacek Leociak told reporters. “We see the ghetto through their eyes.

“This roll of film is a priceless record because it goes beyond the German perspectiv­e, the perspectiv­e of executione­rs showing Jews as dehumanise­d, anonymous victims,” he said.

“These are the only known photograph­s (from the ghetto during the uprising) not taken by the Germans and not taken for propaganda purposes,” Zuzanna Schnepf-Kolacz curator at the POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews, told AFP.

The roll of film, which includes 33 photos from the ghetto, was shot by Zbigniew Grzywaczew­ski, a non-Jewish Pole and firefighte­r.

It was only rediscover­ed in December 2022 by his son, Maciej. He found the old roll, its edges slightly mangled, in a cardboard box with photo archives. They had lain there forgotten for decades since

Grzywaczew­ski’s death in 1993, he told AFP.

“My father never told us that he took photos inside the ghetto - maybe because it was too difficult for him,” said Maciej Grzywaczew­ski, 68.

His father’s journal entries from that time - May 1943 made it clear that he had seen far worse than the photos depicted.

The faces of those in the ghetto would stay with him forever, he wrote. “Figures staggering from hunger and dismay, filthy, ragged. Shot dead en masse.

“Those still alive falling over the bodies of the ones who have already been annihilate­d.”

As a firefighte­r, his father had been called to put out fires started by the Nazis following the outbreak of the uprising.

The Germans had systematic­ally set fire to buildings in the ghetto to force out the residents and insurgents hiding inside.

A year after invading Poland in 1939, Germany created the Warsaw ghetto - the biggest of its kind in World War II - to hold almost half a million Jews.

People were crammed into a small neighbourh­ood where disease and hunger were rife.

Of those who survived the conditions, 260,000 - a quarter of Warsaw’s population - were deported to the Treblinka exterminat­ion camp and killed as part of the Holocaust.

 ?? AP ?? The negatives dated on April 20, 1943, and taken by Polish firefighte­r Zbigniew Leszek Grzywaczew­ski shows houses that were abandoned by the Jewish population during the uprising of the Warsaw ghetto in 1943, Poland.
AP The negatives dated on April 20, 1943, and taken by Polish firefighte­r Zbigniew Leszek Grzywaczew­ski shows houses that were abandoned by the Jewish population during the uprising of the Warsaw ghetto in 1943, Poland.
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