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Facsimile edition of a handwritten Passover Haggadah from Gurs
detention camp, where Jewish prisoners celebrated the Festival of
Freedom behind barbed wire.
Mortality was extremely high under inhuman conditions of freezing
cold, quicksand, poor food and barracks that hardly provided
shelter.
In
the summer of 1942, most of the inmates were transported to Drancy
and from there to Auschwitz.
“Haggadah as written with paintings by various painters incarcerated
in the camp… photographs and short notes, all emphasizing the
concern of the imprisoned community leaders were with culture and
religion…” [Ruth Almog, Ha’aretz, 9 January 2004]
“Collective memories of a detention camp combines historical
research with personal memories… Includes comprehensive history of
the camp. Despite overcrowding, separation of families, constant
hunger, illnesses and daily deaths, the inmates kept their humanity,
among others by maintaining an orchestra, theatre, and keeping
Jewish tradition.” [Shulamit Geva, Ma’ariv, 9 April 1999]
“This Haggadah should be reproduced and its history made known: it
is witness to the intensity of religious life during the Shoah in
certain camps. Should be read on Passover and at any time.” [Tzafon
(French), 48, 25 January 2005] |