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Album of a
German Soldier
While the ghetto’s Jewish leadership
decided to immortalize its positive activities in pictures, the
Germans used their cameras to document the harsh reality of life in
the ghetto. In addition to the official photographers who came to
the ghetto to shoot news and propaganda photos, there was also a
widespread phenomenon of “soldier tourists” in the ghetto. The
Warsaw region encompassed a large number of German military bases
and the city also served as an important crossroads for military
transportation on the Eastern Front. Many soldiers passed through
the city and spent their free time there. The Jewish ghetto,
following its closure in November 1940, quickly became an
anthropological attraction for these soldiers. We know of at least
ten collections of photos in varying sizes that were taken by
soldiers in the ghetto during their off hours. One such collection,
7566, is displayed somewhere else on this site. Over time,
some of the pictures taken by soldiers have become “standard” photos
of the ghetto, which is what happened to the more than 150 photos
taken by the soldier Heinz Jost in the ghetto over the course of
several days in 1941.
The photographs shown here were taken by
a soldier who served in a supply unit for the German Air Force in
the Warsaw region. They were arranged by him, together with other
photos of Warsaw and his army experiences, in a fine, leather-bound
album that read, “Das Warschauer Ghetto. Ein
Kulturdokument für Adolf Hitler”
(The Warsaw Ghetto. A cultural document for Adolf Hitler). Of
the 109 photos contained in the album, 56 of them deal with the
ghetto. Some of these pictures were taken from a car, and we assume
that the soldier came to the ghetto on a
cold but sunny
day, with someone else in the vehicle, exited
the car somewhere in the ghetto and wandered around on foot.
Unfortunately we do not know the exact date on which the photos were
taken, but we can guess it was in 1942. All of the photos were taken
outdoors and they depict all of the things that the Judenrat’s
pictures did not: the suffering and difficult conditions in the
ghetto. In many photos we see people who have collapsed in the
street, children begging and the general misery that shrouded the
streets of the ghetto. Nevertheless, the photos also show the
people’s efforts at maintaining a normal way of life under these
difficult circumstances, and their attempts to engage in commerce
and trade. Particularly notable are the two extremes of commercial
life in the ghetto: on the one hand there are depressing stores that
have managed, somehow, to remain in business; on the other hand, we
see the active street trading that characterized the ghetto streets.
In contrast with official photographs taken by Jewish
organizations, in which it would seem that the subjects were asked
to ignore the camera, in the soldier’s photos we can sense the
subjects’ awareness of the camera’s presence. People stood facing
the soldier’s camera, and smiled for him. In one of the pictures
(15) we even see a Jewish policeman saluting the photographer.
Evidently, at this stage the ghetto residents had a ready response
when a photographer appeared in their midst – a further indicator of
the large number of photographers who came to the Warsaw ghetto.
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