The Jerusalem Post

Memories in milk bottles: Polish exhibition ‘shouts out’ story of Warsaw Ghetto

- • By MARCIN GOETTIG

WARSAW (Reuters) – A deeply moving exhibition of archives documentin­g the life and annihilati­on of Jews by Nazi Germany in the Warsaw Ghetto during World War II goes on public display in Poland on Thursday.

The “What We Could Not Shout Out To The World” exhibition will display for the first time original documents prepared and hidden by historian Emanuel Ringelblum and a few dozen helpers who risked their lives in the ghetto to save whatever was possible for posterity.

Nazi occupiers in 1940 corralled some 400,000 Jews into a small section of Warsaw, most of who were then sent to camps to be killed or died from the conditions in the ghetto itself.

The ghetto was destroyed during the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising in 1943 when the Nazis, attempting more deportatio­ns, were met with opposition and a month-long revolt.

The exhibition marks the completion of many years of work to organize, translate and often decipher documents that were partly damaged.

Ringelblum and all but three of his aides perished in the Holocaust. But deep under the rubble of the burnt-down ghetto, they left a one-ofa-kind, meticulous chronicle of exterminat­ion.

“We want to help shout out all that they said, find a language that will make this archive well-known and accessible,” said Pawel Spiewak, head of the Jewish Historical Institute in Warsaw where the exhibition is held.

The Ringelblum Archive, consisting of more than 35,000 pages, survived the war and destructio­n of the Warsaw Ghetto in 10 metal cases and two metal milk bottles that were recovered in 1946 and 1950, respective­ly.

In 1999, the Ringelblum archives were assigned “Memory of the World” status by UNESCO, along with such Polish documents as the original manuscript­s of composer Frederic Chopin and the treatises of astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus.

“We want to show that this archive deserves this title,” Spiewak said. “It has to be shown and that people have to see it.”

The archives include documents in Polish, German and Yiddish, Nazi proclamati­ons and Jewish appeals, ghetto ration cards, tram tickets, private letters and photograph­s depicting life in the ghetto.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? PART OF THE ‘What We Could Not Shout Out To The World’ exhibition that opens today at the Jewish Historical Institute in Warsaw.
(Reuters) PART OF THE ‘What We Could Not Shout Out To The World’ exhibition that opens today at the Jewish Historical Institute in Warsaw.

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