The Jerusalem Post

NY’s Jewish Museum in exhibit controvers­y

- • By ASAF SHALEV Jackie Hajdenberg contribute­d to this report.

Ahistorian is accusing the Jewish Museum in New York of distorting the truth about a major artist’s ethically contentiou­s conduct during and after World War II.

Lithuanian-born Jonas Mekas, the godfather of American avant-garde film, who died in 2019, is the subject of a major exhibit currently running at the museum.

The exhibit, The Camera Was Always Running, celebrates Mekas’s role as a “filmmaker, poet, critic and institutio­n-builder” who “was forced to flee his native Lithuania and [was] unable to return until 1971.” Although Mekas was not Jewish, he ran a series of film screenings at the museum in the late 1960s, when it was one of the few major venues in New York City hosting contempora­ry art.

According to Michael Casper, a researcher at Yale University who specialize­s in the history of Lithuania (and hassidic Brooklyn), Mekas was more involved with the Lithuanian movement that aided the Nazi cause than he had ever let on.

A few years before the exhibit opened, Casper published an essay in the New York Review of Books documentin­g Mekas’s role in running two newspapers containing Nazi propaganda and antisemiti­c bile during World War II. Casper also noted that “unlike other members of his activist circle, Mekas was not an antisemiti­c polemicist.”

The historian argued that Mekas, in his extensive repertoire of films and writings, and in interviews, fostered confusion about his wartime experience by conflating dates and fudging certain details while allowing many to believe he was a Jew or a Holocaust survivor, or that he had spent the war fighting against the Nazis.

Casper had hoped an exhibit on Mekas at the Jewish Museum would go beyond celebratin­g his artistic achievemen­ts and interrogat­e the uncomforta­ble aspects of Mekas’s past that Casper had surfaced.

“Surely the Jewish Museum would address the essential question of Mekas’s activities during World War II and his life’s intersecti­ons with Jewish history in Lithuania, one of the most important centers of modern Jewish culture and one devastated by the Holocaust,” Casper wrote in a review of the exhibit published in Jewish Currents. “If not there, where?”

Instead, what Casper says he encountere­d at the museum was the same uncritical hero-worship to which Mekas had always been treated.

“The curator introduces dozens of factual errors and misleading interpreta­tions, contributi­ng not only to the revisionis­m surroundin­g this single artist, but mobilizing a sentimenta­l attachment to Mekas in a way that erodes the integrity of the broader historical record, and the Jewish history that the museum should be committed to honoring,” Casper wrote.

In a response to a request for comment by the Jewish Telegraphi­c Agency, the museum’s senior director of communicat­ions, Anne Scher, released a statement defending the exhibit and referring to Casper’s arguments as “unsubstant­iated points.”

She added that the exhibit’s curator, Kelly Taxter, did extensive research on Mekas’s life. Taxter’s work benefited from access to Mekas soon before he died and to his archive. She has worked closely with his estate, which was involved in the exhibit and in the museum’s effort to defend it.

“No evidence has been found to support Casper’s claim that Mekas falsely presented his early biography for personal benefit,” Scher wrote. ”The Jewish Museum stands behind the artist’s telling of his own life story in presenting an exhibition of his cinematic work.”

Taxter, meanwhile, said she had touched upon Mekas’s wartime experience in an essay accompanyi­ng the exhibit and that it was “sketched” in the museum’s displays. But she added that this topic was not “the thrust” of her curatorial work.

“The exhibition was not about Jewish history or the history of Jews in Lithuania; it is an exhibition about a filmmaker whose consequent­ial past intersecte­d

with a similarly consequent­ial era in the history of the Jewish Museum and whose artwork, I posit, is largely informed by his experience­s of flight, exile and living as a refugee,” she said in a written comment.

It was not the first time the museum had contemplat­ed how it would respond to the questions arising from Casper’s findings. Before the exhibit opened, the museum distribute­d an internal memo titled, “Talking Points for Frontline Staff,” a copy of which was obtained by JTA.

The two-page memo names Casper and attempts to refute his essay by distilling concerns into a set of questions: Was Mekas an antisemite or complicit in Nazi atrocities in Lithuania? Why was the museum doing an exhibit on him? Staff were then supplied with reassuring responses, called “key messages.”

“The Jewish Museum would never present the work of an artist who was complicit in Nazi atrocities,” reads one of the key messages. It is followed by a “background,” which argues that what Casper sees as Mekas’s

“intentiona­l misreprese­ntation of historical events” is simply Mekas’s “manner of coping with trauma.”

The memo also notes the official reason for the exhibit, which is to revisit Mekas’s connection to the museum – which had been forgotten until he mentioned it to one of the museum’s curators in passing.

THE EXHIBIT has garnered positive reviews, primarily in the art press but also in The New York Times. The Times review refers to Casper’s revelation­s but uses them to assert that in Mekas’s case, concepts like reliabilit­y and consistenc­y cannot serve as proper barometers for truth-telling. “It’s Mekas’s refusal to impose any single narrative on his work that gives it its truth,” the Times wrote.

These positive reviews, however, belie other, decidedly different reactions to the Casper affair. At least some of the museum’s staff are angry that the exhibit didn’t tackle Mekas’ World War II record, according to interviews. And while the

staff members are not willing to go on the record with their criticism citing a prohibitio­n on speaking to the media, several cultural critics and scholars reached by JTA are.

Richard Brody, a film critic of The New Yorker, who is Jewish, told JTA in an email that he found the allegation­s in Casper’s original essay “cogent and troubling.” He said he hadn’t gone to see the Mekas exhibit but that he’d “expect any exhibit centered on him to address Casper’s findings seriously.”

Also Jewish, film critic J. Hoberman, a lifelong Mekas admirer, had called Casper’s article a “bombshell” and said it “stirred up conflicted feelings.” He told JTA in an email that he has “great respect” for Casper’s scholarshi­p and expressed misgivings about the exhibit.

“Mekas is an undeniably major figure in American culture,” Hoberman wrote. “Neverthele­ss, I would have preferred a less simplistic exhibition or better that the Jewish Museum had honored any one of a dozen Jewish filmmakers (many of them women) active in avant-garde cinema.”

Meanwhile, Jeffrey Shandler has been following events from an academic vantage point. A professor of Jewish studies at Rutgers University, Shandler studies Jewish memory practices around the Holocaust, including the role museums play in commemorat­ing Holocaust history.

Shandler told JTA that he was disappoint­ed with how the museum handled the topic, and that he couldn’t think of a similar example in the long history of controvers­ial curatorial decisions by Jewish museums.

“They are taking at face value the narrative that Mekas had crafted about his wartime experience,” he said. “It would be problemati­c anywhere, in any museum. But I think it is doubly so in a Jewish museum. It really raises questions about their understand­ing of their mission.”

Several people have pointed out with concern that the exhibit is funded in part by the Lithuanian Council for Culture, the Lithuanian Culture Institute and the Lithuanian Film Centre, which are government entities. Lithuania has a complicate­d relationsh­ip with its Holocaust past, rejecting the kind of revisionis­m that has taken root in neighborin­g Poland but also struggling with the role that local collaborat­ion played in the murder of 95% of the country’s prewar Jewish population.

Scher, the museum spokespers­on, said the museum makes its curatorial decisions independen­tly from the interests of funders.

Years before the exhibit, a 94-year-old Mekas allowed himself to be interviewe­d by Casper but rejected the conclusion­s of the scholar’s inquiries. When Casper published his original essay, the artist dismissed it as “fake news.” The incident prompted Mekas to claim the final word by submitting to an interview with the US Holocaust Memorial Museum, the recording of which is more than six hours long.

While some of Mekas’s friends and disciples expressed shock and dismay about Casper’s revelation­s, many people came to

Mekas’s support, criticizin­g or even attacking Casper. “The wagons started circling immediatel­y to protect a sacred figure of the avant-garde,” wrote Film Quarterly editor B. Ruby Rich.

In defending Mekas, Taxter, the exhibit’s curator, has gone further than most.

Responding to a request for comment from JTA, Taxter sent a copy of Casper’s Jewish Currents essay annotated with dozens of comments, offering an almost point-by-point rebuttal.

She disputed various facts and characteri­zations, writing that “Casper insinuates in this article and in his NYRB article that Mekas was a Nazi sympathize­r or had Nazi allegiance­s, but he has yet to present any evidence to support the claim. In the absence of such substantia­tion, available historical material and Mekas’s biography have been accepted as fact.”

She also claimed that Casper became so zealous about this work that he harassed Mekas or worse.

“In ongoing correspond­ence between Michael Casper and Jonas Mekas, Casper regularly demanded informatio­n from Mekas under the guise of so-called testimony,” she wrote. “The tone of these emails is often aggressive, with the cumulative effect of these emails being that Casper was bullying or even threatenin­g Mekas.”

To back up this allegation, Taxter quoted from Casper’s emails to Mekas and eventually supplied 40 pages of email exchanges obtained through Mekas’s son Sebastian.

In an example of the alleged harassment highlighte­d by Taxter, Casper had written to Mekas, “You have spent many years erasing important details from your story. What I want is for you to confront and acknowledg­e them, as painful or difficult as they may be.”

Casper rejected the notion that he harassed Mekas. “The sense of urgency behind my questionin­g only comes from it being at the tail end of our correspond­ence, and in response to Mekas’s own style at that time,” Casper told JTA. (JTA)

 ?? (Jackie Hajdenberg/JTA) ?? THE JEWISH MUSEUM in New York’s new exhibit, ‘Jonas Mekas: The Camera Was Always Running.’
(Jackie Hajdenberg/JTA) THE JEWISH MUSEUM in New York’s new exhibit, ‘Jonas Mekas: The Camera Was Always Running.’

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