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Following an Unlikely Tip,
Auschwitz Dig Unearths a Trove of Lost Judaica
By Joshua Cohen
FORWARD, New York, 25 June 2004
June 25, 2004
Oswiecim, Poland - A crew of Polish
archeologists searching for a buried treasure at the
former site of the Great Synagogue here struck gold
Monday when they discovered a trove of artifacts, including
three synagogue menorahs, a Chanukah menorah, the eternal
light and several synagogue chandeliers.
The diggers were acting on evidence
- unearthed in an incredible tale of luck and suspense
- that in 1939, the local Jewish community had buried
Torahs and other holy books and various artifacts in
metal cases below the synagogue floor, just before the
building was blown up by the Nazis. The archeological
excavation started at the beginning of June in the once-vibrant
Jewish town of Oswiecim, known popularly by its German
name, Auschwitz. The town is adjacent to the infamous
Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp complex.
"Around 11 in the morning,
I got a call from the woman who is in charge of the
archeological team, [who said], 'There's something sticking
out of ground' that resembles a menorah," said
Tomasz Kunezcwicz, the head of the Auschwitz Jewish
Center. "We went there immediately, and they were
uncovering it, layer by layer, and finally the collection
of these artifacts was uncovered."
Amazingly, Israeli director and
producer Yahaly Gat, who has been
filming a documentary about the search, captured the
discovery on film.
The project was financed by the Conference on Jewish
Material Claims
Against Germany and by private donors, and has the support
of the
Auschwitz Jewish Center and the Bielsko-Biala Jewish
Community, the
nearest active Jewish community in Poland.
But little tops the story's origin.
The dig is the culmination of a six-year project that
began in Israel with an innocent shopping excursion
by an unassuming young man named Yariv Nornberg, a native
of Ramat Hasharon.
In 1998, Nornberg, just out of
the army, entered a small local store to purchase an
Israeli flag for the upcoming Independence Day celebrations.
The store was owned and operated by a 90-year-old man
named Yishayahu Yarot, who told Nornberg that he had
no flags in stock and asked him to come back in a week's
time. Nornberg explained to the man that he could not
return the following week, because he was scheduled
to fly to Europe to tour the concentration camps. According
to Nornberg, Yarot then said, "I was born in Poland.
I was born in Auschwitz...."
After two hours of talking, Yarot
retreated to the rear of his store and returned with
a piece of paper on which he proceeded to draw a map.
According to Yarot, immediately prior to the Nazis occupying
the town in the autumn of 1939 (most probably in early
September), Yarot walked by the Great Synagogue — a
large structure with the capacity to hold 2,000 people
— and saw three men, among them the gabbai, or sexton,
taking Torah scrolls and ornaments, placing them in
two metal boxes and burying them in the ground. Yarot
handed Nornberg the detailed map indicating the spot
on which he thought the scrolls were buried
"You be a messenger,"
Yarot commanded Nornberg, who until two hours before
had been a complete stranger, "and find it."
According to Nornberg's filmed
interview in Oswiecim on April 23, he spent years contacting
other survivors in the hopes of corroborating Yarot's
claim and supplementing his provided map. Nornberg claims
that a few survivors have backed up the story: According
to one, a man named Shlomo Betar, the burial was a popular
legend in the area ghetto of Sosnowiec and, perhaps
more compellingly, Nornberg unearthed an entry in the
local Jewish registry book housed in an archive in the
city of Bialsko-Biala that read: "And on that day
I told Salinger to get two large crates lined with clay
and to assemble the Torah scrolls."
Yarot soon sought help from Adam
Druks, a trained archaeologist and the son of a former
deputy mayor of the town. Druks led Nornberg to Kalman
Lehrer, son of the gabbai of Oshpitzin, the man who
supposedly was involved in burying the Torahs.
Lehrer did not remember if his
father ever said anything about the buried Torahs, but
he did have his own memory from the site. "[My
father] sent me into the shul after the Nazis looted
it," said Lehrer, "and a moment after I left,
the roof fell in."
Which is how it came to be that
on a grassy hill overlooking a valley leading to the
two worst concentration camps of the Holocaust, the
foundations of a synagogue lay exposed. As of early
June, after a week of digging, the crew had exposed
the tiled floor of the synagogue, the site of the ark
and many, many bricks - in addition to a ceremonial
washbasin, some charred prayer books, and some crumbling
dedication and memorial plaques. In the first surprise
discovery before Monday's find, they excavated Nazi
bunkers sunk into the corners of the foundations of
the destroyed synagogue; inside one were a helmet and
a gasmask. The crew is still searching for the Torahs.
According to Polish archeologists
and historians involved with the project, Yarot's map
was an accurate remembering of the 600-square-meter
site of the 19th-century Great Synagogue, a structure
preserved only in a few photographs and illustrated
postcards. Yarot marked a point near the southeast end
of the site, an area now abutting a planned Gypsy Cultural
Center, as the site of the treasure. The artifacts were
not found in this location, or in metal cases.
"I am not usually optimistic,"
said Nornberg, "but if there is a small chance
[of finding the scrolls], then we have a moral obligation
to try. The one remaining shul in Auschwitz has two
Torahs, written in the United States and donated. But
here we have an opportunity to find original scrolls
belonging to this great, historic town, which once had
a majority Jewish presence."
None of the Polish archaeologists
or historians involved had heard of the Torah burial
prior to this project - and no mention of it is made
in any Jewish records, except in the document that Nornberg
cites in an English translation he'd obtained. Still,
one archeologist was willing to make at least a cautious
prediction.
"If in fact the Torahs were
placed in a metal box or boxes sealed with clay or tar,
there is a chance that they have survived intact,"
said Dominika Sieminski. And even if they are not found,
she added, the discoveries so far are themselves of
enormous import.
"Though I am not sure the
Torahs are here - they might have been dug up secretly
before - the synagogue's floor is a [considerable] find,"
said Sieminski.
But whether or not the hidden
Torahs are myth, the dig itself is a testament to the
town's enduring Jewish legacy that has long been overshadowed
by its monstrous destruction.
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