Tag Archives: Holocaust

Review: Hannah Arendt

Frances James finds Hannah Arendt an unusually thoughtful portrait of the Holocaust.

Image credit: Collider
Image credit: Collider

Based on true events and set in 1961, this captivating film follows the German-American political theorist and philosopher Hannah Arendt as she reports on the trial of Adolf Eichmann, the Nazi-SS colonel who was famously put on trial for crimes against humanity in the aftermath of WWII.

The film itself takes a beautifully detailed look at the process taken by Hannah to report on the trial. During the initial stages of the film we watch Hannah as she travels to Jerusalem and innocently begins to observe, explore and write on the proceedings.

From time to time director Margarethe von Trotta cleverly inputs footage from the actual Eichmann trial and as an audience we are consequentially forced to accept the severity and reality of the situation.

However it is through the skilful and frank portrayal of Hannah by the German actress Barbara Sukowa that the audience is really able to understand the questions that are raised.

as Arendt. Image credit: BBC
Barbara Sukowa as Arendt.
Image credit: BBC

The honest depiction of Hannah allows us to fully comprehend her emotional turmoil as she eventually reaches the controversial conclusion that Eichmann himself was in fact not the monster that many saw him to be. He was simply a nobody – a man who was fixated on obeying orders.

Turning the court room into a philosophy class, Hannah frantically tries to explain to her opponents that Eichmann did not act out of intent to kill but through intent to obey orders and in doing so removed his capacity to comprehend or even to think about his actions.

As a film that explores the aftermath of the Holocaust, it does so in a way that is not often seen in cinema. By taking a philosophical stance, the film has left us debating the level of punishment necessary for the Nazi Eichmann; a result that may come as quite a shock to many.

Frances James

Was Hannah Arendt a necessary addition to the Holocaust film canon? Or is it another exercise in misrepresenting the past? Let us know on FacebookTwitter or by commenting below.

Reading the Unexpected: An interview with two narrators of the Holocaust

Inspired by the Holocaust Memorial Week of 21-27th January, Georgina Holland began to explore the difficult subject through literature. One month on, she discusses two great books which take a surprising new look at the history of WW2, and questions the writers behind them…

savage

During the Holocaust memorial week of January, I attended a book talk by British author and historian Keith Lowe. Listening to Lowe talk about his research, the testimonies of Holocaust survivors, his findings, as well as to the reactions of those in the audience, inspired me to read into a subject that I only really had an understanding of from time spent in history lessons. In doing so I came across two books, a fiction and a non-fiction, which approached the topic with a surprisingly fresh and innovative approach. Both texts caught me by surprise and taught me that such events can be explored outside of the classroom.

I began with Keith Lowe’s own book; Savage Continent. This was a book which explored an unexpected era – the Holocaust’s aftermath. Lowe focuses in on Europe in the years 1944-1949; a time of chaos, political upheaval, legal uncertainty, and unconstrained violence. Lowe explained that his aim with Savage Continent was to deal with the consequences of the war and of the Holocaust, to highlight how the war did not end neatly, and, in many parts of continental Europe, how it didn’t really end at all. He explained, “we have a cosy idea that May 8th came along and there was a big party […] and everything went back to normal”. “There was the party” he tells us, “but they woke up with the mother of all hangovers.” In Germany for example, there was no police, no electricity, no government; whole institutions were wiped out in Eastern Europe. “This book is about that period of chaos where nobody knows what the future will hold.”

And this is what really set the book apart for me – it deals with the unexpected. Not only does it deal with the reader’s expectations of what a history book about WWII will discuss, but it challenges the misconceptions of how the war ended and what happened next. In particular, Lowe excels when dealing with the issue of those who survived the Holocaust and their ‘what happened next’. He tells us that Jews returned home not to “sympathy”, but instead to an “embarassed silence”. For example, Lowe describes the difficulty for Jews who survived the war but returned home to find that there belongings had been taken up by former friends and neighbours. During his research, he came upon an old joke in Budapest: “A Jew returns from the concentration campus and sees his friend. His friend says to him, ‘it’s so good to see you, how are you?’ The Jew replies, ‘it was awful, and now all I have is the shirt on your back.'”

If you are looking for a book which will delve into the unexplored history of the Second World War, then Savage Continent is the book for you. It’s approach is entirely unexpected and sheds new light on a subject which has  been analysed (and rightly so) time and time again. When asked if anything in he was surprised by his findings, Lowe admitted that even he was shocked at the level of destruction: “I was ignorant as to the extent of the damage in Italy”, for example.  Lowe was also surprised by the tactics that he would have to employ during his research, learning that “it’s what is left unspoken that sometimes gives the biggest clue.” And that is what Savage Continent seems to me to do, to explore the unspoken and analyse the unexpected.

warsawFrom an unexpected historical text, to a emotional work of fiction, I turned next to a novel in my quest to read into the Holocaust and its history. I came upon Richard Foreman’s Warsaw. The book focuses on three characters in the Warsaw ghetto, 1942: Adam Duritz, a corrupt Jewish policeman; Thomas Abendroth, a German soldier; and Jessica Rubenstein, a beautiful and vulnerable Jewish girl. For these characters their only salvation in a hostile environment which breeds corruption, as well as disease and death, will be love. I questioned Foreman on his motives for writing the book, his approach in doing so, and his experiences in writing about such an emotional and difficult era of history. Surprisingly his research began not with Germany, but with Russia: “in a sense the book is partly a homage to certain 19th century Russian novelists I read in my early twenties, the research was already half done from devouring Russian literature years ago. In regards to the more conventional research into the history behind the Warsaw Ghetto I was fortunate in knowing a number of World War Two historians who could point me in the direction of the best books to read.”

At no point does Foreman soften the subject of the Holocaust. Although peppered with stories of love, this is certainly not a romantic story of good overcoming evil, and  his descriptions of the treatment of Jews can, at times, be extremely graphic and sobering. I asked Foreman if these scenes were as difficult to write as they are to read: “The chapters and scenes were planned beforehand in many respects, which perhaps lessened the drama or trauma I felt when writing certain sections of the books. But even now there are scenes in the novel which can provoke powerful emotions when I approach Warsaw as a reader, as opposed to writer. Although I have never been a Jewish policeman or German soldier I would be lying if I said that the book is not autobiographical in some ways. Reading and writing Warsaw was an act of catharsis, as well as creativity. It took a lot out of me. I’m just glad that when people read it the book gives something back.”

What I loved about Warsaw was its brave approach to the subject of the Holocaust; particularly in the handling of the character of a German soldier which is, in many ways, a positive one. Foreman told me that “should Warsaw have been written shortly after the war I may have received criticism for creating the character of Thomas – a “good” German soldier – but I think both British and German readers are now ready for such a sympathetic portrait.” And this is where the motive of both books can be linked, in their innovative approaches to creating a portrait of the Holocaust and its history.  As Foreman explains; “I was conscious of trying to expand the reader’s understanding of the Third Reich, as well as of the Warsaw Ghetto.”

Upon purchasing both books I had expected to come away with a better understanding of the history of the Second World War and to have read a book which attempts to put into words the narrative of those who experienced it. In many ways this is exactly what I got, but I also gained so much more. Whether through an exploration of an era which is often misunderstood, or by telling the story of a group that was denied a voice, both Lowe and Foreman provided me with a new means of understanding WWII and its aftermath. I would thoroughly recommend both of these texts to those who are also interested in expanding their understanding of a period of history which is marked by war, death, and the unexpected.

By Georgina Holland – Exeposé Online Books Editor

Click here to purchase Richard Foreman’s e-book ‘Warsaw’ for just £2.99
Click here to purchase Keith Lowe’s Save Continent via Amazon

 

Review: Prisoner Number A26188: Henia Bryer

Image credit: BBC
Image credit: BBC

The remarkable Holocaust survivor, Henia Bryer, ends her interview with the BBC by stating quite simply and matter-of-factly: “I’m not a hero. I don’t want to be remembered for anything special, just a good mother and a grandmother and a friend.” Whilst Henia does not believe she is a hero, her past is anything but ‘normal’ and her story is one of courage and inspiration.

 

Henia is a Holocaust survivor who grew up in in Poland during World War Two. One of four children, her early life was one of happiness and contentment. However, on coming back from holiday in 1939, she found that Poland was in the midst of being invaded. This began the discrimination and hardship that Henia and her family, along with millions of other Jews and outsiders, would have to endure for the next six years.

 

Henia’s journey throughout the war was astonishing. In 1941 Henia and her family were moved into the Polish ghetto of Radom. 30,000 Polish Jews entered the ghetto, of which only 300 would survive. In 1944 she was moved, along with the surviving members of her family to three different camps, first to Majdanek, then Plaszow and finally the notorious Auschwitz-Birkenau, before being forced to endure a gruelling ‘death march’ by the German forces before being liberated by Allied forces in 1945.

 

Whilst Henia was clearly emotional about her past, she has managed to separate her past from her life today, something which many other Holocaust survivors have been unable to do. She described in vivid detail, whilst looking directly into the camera, how her family was separated, how her older brother who had been disabled from birth was killed and how her younger sister, still being very young, was killed because she was just a child. Her father, a respectable Polish citizen, was beaten to death by German officers.

 

Henia’s story is certainly sad, but with it came a story of hope and determination. She frequently mentioned acts of kindness that she witnessed and participated in during her times in the ghetto and the death camps, and stated that these helped her to keep on going. Henia described how her best friend, who she met in the ghetto and was in each camp with her, worked extra hard on Henia’s birthday in order to get an extra bit of bread; this would be Henia’s birthday present. The selflessness that Henia described is inspiring, as was her determination not to die at the hands of the Germans. Henia repeatedly told herself while in the camps that she was “too young to die, I can’t die. I haven’t seen anything, I haven’t done anything yet.”

 

After the war, Henia was reunited with her mother and her brother and lived in both France and Israel, before meeting her husband Maurice and settling in his home country of South Africa. Perhaps most astonishingly, Henia and her family agreed never to speak of the war and never to describe what they had each lived through with each other. Even to this day, Henia is unaware of what her brother did during the war, and he has not even told his family.

 

In comparison to other documentaries about World War Two and the Holocaust, Henia’s interview with the BBC is simple and unembellished. Henia is the presenter: her voice narrates her story and illustrates her suffering throughout the duration of the documentary. Instead of using recreations, which so many other documentaries readily turn to, Henia’s documentary uses real, stark, pictures of the death camps, along with Henia’s own personal photos of her childhood, which highlight the brutal suffering that she, along with so many, was forced to endure.

 

Henia survived because of luck as well as the kindness of others, but most importantly because she was determined. She never gave up hope and continued to believe, even at the height of her suffering, that she would be reunited with members of her family again, despite knowing for certain that two of her siblings had already been killed by the Germans. Holocaust survivors tell stories of pain and anguish, but what makes Henia special is that she feels no bitterness towards her captors. Rather, she is resolute that the Holocaust will not be forgotten by future generations and that the atrocities which happened will never be repeated, something which she is keen to mention in the documentary. Henia’s story is one of inspiration and one that we can all look to for hope and courage.

Beatrice Wood

Prisoner Number A26188: Henia Bryer can be found on BBC iPlayer.