Shalom Magazine Winter 2021

Page 18

HOLOCAUST EDUCATION

WARSAW: A CITY DIVIDED BY ERIC BEDNARSKI

This year, my documentary film “Warsaw: A City Divided” will make its Atlantic Canadian premiere as a part of the AJC’s April 2021 Yom HaShoah Holocaust Memorial observance. It is an honour for me, as a native Haligonian, to be contributing to this important occasion. Although I was born and educated in Nova Scotia, my strong family connections to Warsaw mean that I have always felt close to this city. I am half-Polish, and although I am not aware of any Jewish roots, I am deeply interested in Polish-Jewish history and culture. As a filmmaker, I have frequently been inspired to explore topics and issues relating to the history of Warsaw. I learned at an early age how over the course of the Second World War, and in the years that followed, the city was divided and destroyed by one totalitarian force (that of the Nazis), then nationalized, redesigned and re-built by another (that of the Soviets). I have long been keenly aware of the tragedy of the Warsaw Ghetto. My father is 92 years old, so he remembers pre-War Poland. He survived the Nazi occupation and destruction of Warsaw and has many vivid memories. As I was growing up, his stories about the War and the Holocaust had a profound effect on me. About fifteen years ago, I unearthed ten minutes of remarkable 8mm Polish amateur footage shot in the Ghetto in 1941, soon after its creation by the Nazis. This footage was completely unknown at that point. When I took it to Yad Vashem, the World Holocaust Remembrance Center and Memorial in Jerusalem, scholars there described it as the missing link in the visual history of the Warsaw Ghetto. The material shot by the Polish amateur photographer differs in significant ways from the well-known footage later produced by Nazi German propaganda film crews in 1942, footage on which we have depended until now for visual documentation on the Ghetto. We are shown quite different locations. We discover the Ghetto in a much earlier phase of its existence. Above all, we are not seeing it through the eyes of occupiers and perpetrators. With my discovery of the footage came a strong sense of responsibility. I knew I had to study it and properly identify its contents, and I knew I had to show it to the world. My goal was to incorporate the 8mm footage into a documentary that would provide a context for it and help the viewer to appreciate the significance of 18

Shalom

W I NTE R 2021

what it contains. The story of the Ghetto is already widely known, but I hoped to explore that story from new angles. The initial development of the film was carried out in collaboration with the Atlantic Centre of the National Film Board of Canada, beginning in 2010. During this phase, I read widely on the subject, met and talked with survivors and witnesses in Warsaw, and consulted with institutions and historians in the U.K., Israel, Poland, and Canada. Work on the film continued over the next few years in Poland, where it was eventually shot and produced, and where it premiered in Warsaw in 2019. Since then, the film has been screened widely at international events and festivals. It will be broadcast on television in Germany, the Czech Republic and Poland later this year. “Warsaw: A City Divided” is a film about the division of Warsaw and its horrific consequences. The main focus is on the creation and ultimate liquidation of the artificially established Ghetto, and the murder of its inhabitants. But the Ghetto is not treated in isolation. It is seen in relation to the city of which it had once been a living part and from which it was brutally severed. The film foregrounds the stories of the protagonists—survivors and witnesses, Jews and non-Jews—who still call Warsaw their home, and interspersed throughout it are scenes of the anonymous people in the historic 8mm footage itself, almost all of whom would undoubtedly have perished before many months had passed. This is the film’s human face. But my goal was also to shed new light on the actual process of division and destruction set in motion by the Nazis. The film

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Articles inside

A Very Jewish Issue

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page 46

When the Messiah Comes

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page 46

Your Life, My Autograph

2min
page 45

Purim and the Coronavirus Era: A Contrast of Times

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Self Sacrifice - Then and Now

2min
page 44

The End of an Era

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page 43

Beth El Synagogue News

1min
page 42

Newfoundland News

2min
page 42

Fredericton News

3min
page 41

Saint John News

1min
page 41

PEI News

3min
page 40

Moncton News

2min
page 39

Cape Breton News

6min
pages 38-39

The 2020 Atlantic Jewish Virtual Film Festival

2min
page 36

Studying in Israel

3min
page 34

On the Life of Stephen Rukasin, z"l

3min
page 33

On the Life of Naomi Judah, z"l

2min
page 32

On the Life of Joseph Kohn, z"l

1min
page 32

On the Life of Harold Davis, z"l

1min
page 31

On the Life of Jana Wieder, z"l

3min
page 31

Remembering Molly Rechnitzer, z"l

2min
page 30

David Rubin's Legacy Gift

1min
page 30

Biography of Dr. Jayson Greenblatt

3min
page 29

Speculative Cartographies

7min
pages 16-17

Campus News

1min
page 12

From the Desk of Edna Levine

4min
page 7

From the Desk Of Naomi Rosenfeld

4min
page 5

From the Desk of Marilyn Kaufman

4min
page 4

The AJC is one of six new communities selected to participate in an North American-wide Jewish Legacy Giving Initiative

2min
page 2

The Importance Of Shoah Education

6min
pages 14-17

Message From Jewish Federations of Canada United Israel Appeal

3min
page 11

Warsaw: A City Divided

4min
pages 18-20

Camp Kadimah News

2min
page 13

CIJA Report

4min
pages 9-10

My Hanukkah Celebration With The Canadian Forces Base Halifax

3min
page 21
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