|
||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||
City Home:
Library Home:
News
Letters to Sala Draws on Materials from the Archives of The New York Public LibraryThe power of the written word to sustain life is a central theme of Letters to Sala: A Young Woman's Life in Nazi Labor Camps, a compelling collection of rare Holocaust-era letters and photographs that are part of the collections of The New York Public Library’s Dorot Jewish Division. The items—from handwritten postcards to photographs to official documents -- were saved at great personal risk by Sala Garncarz from the time she entered a Nazi labor camp in 1940 until her liberation in 1945. The collection provides a remarkable first-hand view of the human drama that unfolded among Jewish victims forced to work as slave laborers. Curated by Jill Vexler, a striking exhibition reproducing the letters, postcards, photographs, and documents will be on view at the Central Library of the San Antonio Public Library from Sunday, November 9 through Sunday, December 28. The exhibition opening will be on Sunday, November 9th at 1:00pm and will feature Ann Kirschner, Sala’s daughter and author of Sala’s Gift: My Mother’s Holocaust Story and Jill Vexler, the curator of the exhibition. This exhibition at the San Antonio Public Library is made possible by the Dalkowitz Foundation, the San Antonio Public Library Foundation, and the San Antonio Public Library. For more information about the exhibition and programming please call Barbara Celitans at the Central Library, 210-207-2627. “How do I say goodbye?” Sala wrote in her diary the day she was sent to the labor camp. “I tried to keep a smile on my face . . . though my eyes were filled with tears. One must go on bravely, courageously, even if the heart is breaking.” In addition to diary excerpts such as this one, the exhibition presents approximately 100 postcards, letters, photographs, documents, and other artifacts drawn primarily from the Sala Garncarz Collection of The New York Public Library's Dorot Jewish Division. The total archive, which encompasses more than 350 items that Sala Garncarz collected, was donated to the Library in 2005 by Sala Garncarz Kirschner and her family. “As primary documents of the Nazi labor camps, these letters are an invaluable resource for those who study the Holocaust and are among the most fascinating to have been given to the Library in many years,” said Paul LeClerc, President of The New York Public Library. “At the same time, as a collection of intensely personal letters, they bring the terrible human consequences of Nazi forced labor to vivid life, and show the effect of this experience on both the interned Jews and their torn families.” “The letters that comprise this exhibition are the true embodiment of how the written word can give life,” said curator Jill Vexler. “What emerges from the exhibition is an inspiring portrait of human resilience in the face of unthinkable atrocity.” “My family and I are delighted that, through Letters to Sala, the public will have the opportunity to learn my mother's incredible story of survival and courage,” said Ann Kirschner. “When the world seemed entirely hostile, a young girl found refuge and hope in these remarkable letters written by her family and friends. Their words will now be preserved and made accessible to the historians and artists whose insights will help future generations to understand the lessons of the past.” “Libraries are not just repositories of books, but also curators of our history and culture, with an inherent responsibility to educate our communities about critical events that are part of our historical landscape,” said Ramiro S. Salazar, Director, San Antonio Public Library. “Sala's story is that of just one person, but it represents the experiences of a whole population. The San Antonio Public Library is proud to offer this moving exhibit which tells the story of one of the most difficult eras in the world's history from the personal point of view of an individual swept up in events almost unbelievable to us today.” ABOUT THE LETTERSThe Letters as Sala's Lifeline The letters on display impart details about Jewish life in occupied Poland, Nazi labor camps, and the human ability to reconstruct life. For Garncarz, the letters provided evidence that her world still existed outside the camps and that her existence within it still mattered. Some carefully handwritten in elegant prose, others hastily jotted down, highlighting the urgent circumstances of their composition, the letters were her lifeline to the friends and family waiting for her return. Saving the letters became inextricably linked with preserving her own life. The letters portray a young woman through the eyes of those who loved her: her sister, Raizel Garncarz, who wrote on behalf of herself and the immediate family; a suitor, Harry Haubenstock, whom she met in a camp; and Ala Gertner, a campmate who looked after her and stayed in touch with her by mail after they were separated. The sixteen year old's own perspective is painfully laid bare in fragments of a diary written as she departed for the labor camp: "“till, I could not stop looking at you, mother, because I felt something inside of me tearing, hurting. One more kiss, one more hug. My mother does not want to let go of me. Let it end already, it is torture. I say goodbye to my sisters.” Garncarz Volunteers for Labor Camp In 1940, her older sister Raizel was ordered to report to the Geppersdorf labor camp for what was said to be a six-week period. The camp was part of a growing network that relied on Jews as slave laborers in construction, textile manufacturing, and munitions factories, and was administered by Albrecht Schmelt, a high-level Nazi bureaucrat appointed by Heinrich Himmler. An estimated 50,000 Jews from the Upper Silesia region of Poland were eventually interned in these labor camps. Sala volunteered to take Raizel's place at the camp, believing that her timid, intellectual sister would find it harder to adapt. Six weeks stretched to five years of slavery for Sala, and while conditions within the camps were deplorable, written exchanges such as Sala's were permitted because the camp's administrators believed it boosted productivity and relieved the anxiety of those left at home. By the end of 1940, all correspondence had to be written in German and letters had to pass through Nazi censors - many of the papers bear Hitler's image and the “Z” stamp indicating that they had been cleared. The Nazis prohibited mail, however, for those interned in concentration camps. A Massive Deportation Embracing a Friendship with Ala Gertner Saving the Letters Once her Nazi captors prohibited new mail from reaching the internees in August 1943, Garncarz found comfort in the birthday greetings sent to her by other women in the same camp. Renewing each other's spirit, they kept one another's dreams alive. To Sala on her birthday, they wrote: “Oh, what a great holiday this would be if we celebrated your birthday in freedom, together with your loved ones ... Let good luck shine on you just like the bright sunshine that steals secretly through our camp windows.” Liberation Unless otherwise indicated, the letters, photographs, and documents in the exhibition are drawn from the Sala Garncarz Kirschner Collection, donated by the Kirschner family in April 2005, to the Dorot Jewish Division of The New York Public Library. The Exhibition and Related Publication, Programs, and Website This traveling exhibition was inspired by Letters to Sala: A Young Woman's Life in Nazi Labor Camps, presented at The New York Public Library from March 7 to June 17, 2006. Support for this exhibition has been provided by the Righteous Persons Foundation, the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, the Berg Foundation, Trudy and Robert Gottesman, the French Children of the Holocaust Foundation and Nancy Schwartz Sternoff, Dobkin Family Foundation. For more information, visit www.nypl.org or contact Curator and Project Manager, Jill Vexler at 212-505-6427 or jill@jillvexler.com. Posted/Updated: 11/06/2008 |
||||||||||||
|
Contact Us |
||||||||||||