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At Polish Catholic pilgrimage
site, Czestochowa,
Exhibition to open on Jewish history
By Carolyn Slutsky
KRAKOW, Poland, April 11 (JTA)
- Czestochowa is known around the world as the site
of the Jasna Gora monastery, a pilgrimage place for
Poles and other Catholics who flock there to see a famous
painting of the Black Madonna.
Soon, residents also will be
able to learn about local Jewish history. An exhibition
on the subject, based on materials from the town archives,
prepares to open for a three-month run later this month
in Czestochowa before traveling to several larger Polish
cities.
Behind the newfound interest in
Czestochowa's Jews is a long story of cooperation.
Two years ago, Jerzy Mizgalski,
historian and dean of the local Pedagogical Institute,
was doing research in the city archives when he found
thousands of documents and photographs dating back to
1618 connected to Czestochowa's Jewish history.
He elicited the help of Elizabeth
Mundlak, a professor of thermodynamics living in Venezuela,
who was born to Jewish parents in Czestochowa and rescued
by Christians during the Holocaust.
Together they conceived of an
exhibition to display the archives and tell the story
of the Jewish history of Czestochowa, which before World
War II was home to 30,000 Jews, about one-third of the
city's population. Today there are 37 Jews living in
the city.
After his find in the municipal
archives, Mizgalski decided to teach a course on Jewish
history, expecting about 35 students - but 400 signed
up.
Mizgalski and Mundlak moved forward
with their plans for the exhibition, and Mundlak approached
two American businessmen and cousins, Sigmund Rolat
and Alan Silberstein, to underwrite the project. The
exhibition is co-sponsored by the city of Czestochowa
and the Jewish Historical Institute in Warsaw.
Three days after the Germans invaded
Poland on Sept. 1, 1939, launching World War II, they
were in Czestochowa, Silberstein said.
During the war, the city was a
centralized concentration point where Jews living in
smaller towns were sent. A large ghetto was established,
and then a smaller one which eventually was liquidated.
Jews were deported mostly to Treblinka
and to the HASAG forced labor camp located in Czestochowa.
Rolat was born in Czestochowa,
and was a young teenager when he was sent to HASAG.
His parents and brother were killed by the Nazis.
He is quick to point out that
not all Jews went to their deaths quietly: Many, like
his father - who took part in the Treblinka uprising
- and his brother, the youngest member of a partisan
group, died fighting.
Rolat survived with the help
of his aunt and uncle, Leon - an underground leader
- and Rose Silberstein, Alan's parents.
Alan Silberstein was born after
the war, and the two branches of the family made their
separate ways to America.
Once the cousins got involved,
the project rolled ahead. With no precedent for an event
that encompasses such a long history in Czestochowa,
the group was free to be creative. They wanted to be
sure the archives showed the broad range of Jewish people
and practices, from the more "quaint, religious"
Jews to the fully assimilated ones, like Rolat.
"I was called a goy,"
he remembers.
The team obtained the help of
Czestochowa's mayor, Tadeusz Wrona.
"It's important for the
younger generation to look at the past and future, a
future that should be created together," Wrona
told JTA in an interview in his office. "We should
look not to a future concentrating on prejudice and
stereotypes, but creating a future free of this."
The mayor agreed to use city
funds to help restore the local Jewish cemetery.
"A trip to the native city
often starts with a visit to the cemetery, the killing
fields for Jews during the war," Rolat says.
The cemetery is accessed through
the gates of the large steel mill that grew up around
it, and which has afforded it a measure of protection.
A month ago the cemetery was "a
jungle," says Rolat, who always has made sure that
his brother's grave is meticulously maintained. Now,
workers clear trees and clean the landscape in a precise
process so as not to disturb any graves.
The restoration comes just in
time for the exhibition, which opens April 21 for three
months and then is to travel to Warsaw, Krakow and Wroclaw.
The exhibition and accompanying academic symposium are
entitled "Coexistence, Holocaust, Memory."
In addition to the rededication of the cemetery, events
include a film premiere, Klezmer music, a military commemoration
ceremony and a performance by the Czestochowa Symphony
Orchestra, which will take place in what is now Philharmonic
Hall. Before it was burned in World War II, the philharmonic
building was the New Synagogue.
Silberstein stresses that the exhibition has several
objectives.
"We want to acquaint the
youth of Poland with what happened to the Jews during
the war, and stress the viable coexistence between Poles
who were Jewish and Poles who were Christian,"
he says.
Above all, the backers hope to
convey a program that is about Jewish life, not Jewish
death.
Standing in the cemetery, Mizgalski
looks wistful.
"You can't talk about the
history of a Polish city without mentioning the one-third
that were Jewish," he says. "The Germans wanted
the memory of Jews to be erased. But we’re not allowed
to forget."
Members of the Czestochowa Diaspora
community are invited to attend the exhibition and symposium.
For more information, contact Stan Steinreich at 212-786-6077
or 201-982-2373
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