Documentation of Atrocities: The Jewish Photographer Henryk Ross

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Yad Vashem
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Video Transcript:
When the Lodz ghetto was sealed in May 1940, Henryk Ross was forced to move into the ghetto. He managed to get a job as one of the official photographers in the ghetto, which gave him access to film and processing facilities. He used these facilities to secretly take pictures of the suffering of the Jews in the ghetto.
He hid his camera under his coat and he opened it slightly and took snaps of images he saw. In this fashion, he managed to accumulate thousands of pictures that show us now what life was like in the ghetto. A few of his pictures display public executions and deportations.
One of these pictures was taken in 1944 at the railroad station in the Lodz ghetto. The photograph displays a cattle car and a group of people standing around it If we look at the framing of the picture, we can see that it is not centered, and this is important, because the photographer was very professional and he was skillful. Furthermore, there's actually a black part on the left hand side of the picture, and also building material in the foreground.
And all of these images are actually blocking the view of the person looking at the picture. It shows us that he had to hide in order to take the picture. The frame is actually showing the conditions of his hiding place - that he did not manage to take a closer look at the actual scene.
Henryk Ross risked his life in order to show what the Nazis tried to hide, and when we combine his testimony with a picture, we actually learn much more about the scene that we're seeing in the picture. We see people boarding the train, but we don't know what happens inside the cattle car, and we also don't know what happens to the people when they arrive at their destinations. So only if we contextualize the picture, and put it into context with other archives like testimonies, maps, or historical accounts, do we gain a better understanding of what was going on.
When the liquidation of the ghetto began in 1944, Ross decided to bury his archive in the ground of the ghetto so it could be dug up later and bear witness to the persecution of European Jews. "Just before the closure of the ghetto [1944] I buried my negatives in the ground in order that there should be some record of our tragedy - namely the total elimination of the Jews from Lodz by the Nazi executioners. I was anticipating the total destruction of Polish Jewry.
I wanted to leave an historical record of our martyrdom. " - Henryk Ross Henryk Ross survived the Holocaust, and he managed to locate and dig up his material after the war. In comparison to the perpetrators' pictures, we can see that his collection is exceptional because he clearly loved human beings and social interactions, and felt compelled to commemorate the Jewish life in the Lodz ghetto.
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