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After infiltrating the Vilna ghetto on a precarious rescue mission
only days before its final
liquidation, Alexander Bogen—Jewish artist, partisan, and former
ghetto resident—was
plagued by a reverberating question: “What motivates someone at the
precipice of death
to engage in artistic creation?”
An artist and a native of Vilna, Bogen neither forsook his artistry
nor ceased to sketch the
people, places, and events he encountered following the Nazi
occupation of Lithuania.
However, it was only after returning to the ghetto in September 1943
that he began
considering the wartime function of innovation: to transform pen
into sword, transcend
the finite parameters of time and space, and retain a spark of
humanity in the face of despair.
These artistic objectives crystallized in his mind through
encounters with ghetto residents,
former friends, and colleagues: the fellow-artist who stood by his
easel—bedraggled and starving—yet oblivious to his condition having captured the elusive smile of
his model on canvas; the all-around
genius who wandered through the streets heedless of his personal
fate having solved an elaborate
mathematics equation; the young orphan abandoned on a street corner
with but a doll in her arms,
who Bogen could not save, so sketched “out of helplessness,
passivity, and the inability to
offer up salvation.”
Aside from reinforcing his personal devotion to art, Bogen’s return
to the ghetto helped
facilitate the successful rescue of members of the United Partisan
Organization
(FPO)—a Jewish underground movement active in the ghetto. After
breaching the ghetto
walls armed with a pistol and two hand grenades, Bogen reached FPO
head, Abba
Kovner’s headquarters. Bogen presented him with a letter from Fyodor
Markov, commander
of the partisan division in Belarussia’s Narocz Forest.
“From the beginning, Kovner’s intention had been to launch a
full-scale armed revolt in the
ghetto to sanctify God’s name and foster pride in the Jews even in
their moment of defeat,”
recalls Bogen. “It was a noble conception, but not practical in my
opinion. We couldn’t fight the
Nazis in the narrow alleyways of the ghetto with our few, primitive
weapons. We would have zero chance.”
With the end in sight, Kovner did not abandon his plans for revolt,
however acceded to the partisans’ request
to smuggle ghetto residents (including members of the FPO) to the
forests.
One hundred and fifty Jewish underground members were assembled and
divided into five units which Bogen
helped train: “I distributed primitive weapons and copies of my map
of the forest. I taught them how to prepare for
and fight the enemy, find food, read a compass, where to hide, and
where and when to walk—all the tactical
information one needs to know to become a partisan,” says Bogen. He
assumed command of one unit, which
included his wife, Rachel, and his mother-in-law. In the late night
hours he helped secure the groups’ escape from the ghetto; a few
days later, all five units arrived safely in the forests where they
joined the non-Jewish partisan ranks.
With Markov’s permission, Bogen retained command of his 30-person
unit, which became the only
all-Jewish partisan brigade—“Vengeance.” The unit achieved many
successes and was responsible for missions such as: mining railroad
tracks and derailing trains, sabotaging German weapons banks and
food rations that were being sent to the front, and disseminating
information about the mass extermination and active resistance in
the nearby ghettos, villages, and towns.
Partisan life was stark and grueling. Aside from risky
reconnaissance missions and clashes with the enemy,fighters
suffered from exposure
to the elements, insufficient food, and much illness. For Jewish
partisans the conditions were even more dire; they had to face the
residual “tragedy,mental torment, longing, and worry about the fate of loved ones left
behind in the ghetto,” notes Bogen, as well as
antisemitic treatment from non-Jewish partisans.
“Jewish
partisans—especially those who served in mixed units with Russians, Letts, and
Belarussians—always had to prove they
were willing to volunteer first for missions and risk the most, ” says Bogen. “They were often
sent poorly armed on hopeless’ operations that had little chance of success.”
Even the “Vengeance Unit” became problematic to the Soviet partisan
leadership due to its all-Jewish character despite its many
achievements.
The unit was disbanded after several months and Bogen (after a few
other appointments in mixed units) joined a group of historians
commissioned
to document partisan activities.
Bogen captured his brothers-in-arms through the medium of art,
sketching scenes of partisan battle, rest,ambush,dress, and
diversion on random scraps of paper using charcoal made from burnt
branches.
“I would try to
capture the typical situations that we would encounter—a unit
returning from its operation…
its members sitting around a bonfire, playing cards, drinking Vodka,
recounting the tales of what befell them…” recounts Bogen. “In
battle, at partisan headquarters…
I would pull out my paper and sketch these things as they were
happening, as a reaction to the events taking place.”
“Ultimately, when I asked myself why I was drawing, when I was
fighting day and night…
[I realized that it was] something similar
to biological continuity.
Every man, every people wishes to leave this one thing… To be
creative during the Holocaust was also a protest.
Each man when standing
face to face with cruel danger, with death, reacts in his own way.
The artist reacts in an
artistic way. This is his weapon…
This is what shows that the
Germans could not break his spirit.”
Alexander Bogen has recently donated 37 of his works created during
his days as a partisan to
Yad Vashem’s Art Museum. Several of these
pieces will be exhibited in
Yad Vashem’s new Holocaust History Museum in the section dedicated
to Jewish fighting.
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