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Putting faces on a tragedy
JAMES AUER,
Journal Sentinel art critic
October 9, 2004
Artist returns to Milwaukee
to paint portraits of Holocaust survivors he's known
all his life
What machine-gun bullets, barbed
wire and deadly fumes could not do, age and infirmity
are quietly achieving.
First-person memories of the
Holocaust are fading away as survivors of Hitler's notorious
death camps, freed by Allied troops in the final bloody
months of World War II, enter their 80s and 90s.
For Leo Neufeld, a Milwaukee-reared artist whose parents,
William and ka Neufeld, were themselves Holocaust survivors,
keeping the 20th century's cruelest tragedy alive for
the benefit of future generations has been an irresistible
challenge.
Neufeld, who now lin Albuquerque, spent five weeks last
summer completing a series of 11 oil portraits, each
measuring 7 inches by 5 inches, that depict individual
survivors, all emigres from Poland and friends of his
late parents.
It was, he said in an intervvery
much like painting members of an extended family, linked
not by blood but by the imminent threat of extinction
60 years earlier.
"This project was miraculous,"
Neufeld, 54, mused during an informal preview of the
series. "I did 11 paintings in less time than I'd
usually do with a single portrait. There's lots more
spontaneity."
The completed character studies are neither fashionably
cool nor intellectually detached. Rather, as Neufeld
put it, they are "from the gut, an instinctual
response to people I've known since childhood. When
I was growing up, all of our friends were survivors.
Wen't know any Americans . . ."
The portraits, executed deftly
and quickly in a style that is looser and more intimate
than his usual brand of pinpoint realism, will make
their debut in Albuquerque this January as part of a
group show titled "Bridges of Peace: Prejudice
and Anti-Semitism."
Then, on June 29, they will have
their local premiere at the Milwaukee Art Museum in
conjunction with a ceremony marking the 60th anniversary
of the liberation of the concentration camps.
They will then become the property of the Holocaust
Education and Resource Ce, a program of the Coalition
for Jewish Learning, which is in turn part of the Milwaukee
Jewish Federation.
"The idea was exciting when
Leo first proposed it to me," said Stearuch, executive
director of the Coalition for Jewish Learning. "I
knew what would happen would be profound, but it has
exceeded my expectations."
Like family
Neufeld himself found the project,
made possible by a grant from the coalition, a memorable
return to childhood, when the subjects of his active
brush were an important part of his life as members
of the aptly named New American Club. Among themselves, he recalled,y
referred to each other as "Greenehs," or newcomers.
They seldom spoke Polish, only Yiddish and the dominant
tongue of their new homeland, English. They were eager
to become fully Americanized but to retain their cultural
cohesion. Today, the old links have been
strained by travel, illness and relocation, but the
Milwaukee connection remains firm and binding.
The youngest member of the surviving group, Morris Parzen,
is 73; the oldest, Michael Kleiner, 85. Somewhere in
between are Cyla Schwerasberg, 79; Israel Wolnerman,
82; Bluma Weinstock, 83; Bernard Feiler, 79; Rose Chrustowski,
81; Lusia Mauer, 75; Sala Garfinkel, 83,; Eva T. Lepold,
74; and Rebecca Peltz, 84.
All escaped death in Europe to
find new lives in the United States. Painting them was,
for the University of Wisconsin-Madison-trained Neufeld,
a long-held dream.
"I was in Milwaukee a year
ago," he recalled, "at a bat mitzvah for a
niece, when my companion, the artist Kristin Diener,
suggested that I had to do this project now if I was
ever going to do it."
Neufeld agreed, and approached the Learning Council's
Baruch, who immediately grasped
the possibilities and arranged for Neufeld to have room
and board provided for him during his subsequent stay
in Milwaukee.
"It was my way," explained
Neufeld, "ofng back to the community . . ."
Most of the survivors he painted
met and married other survivors in the camps, he said.
Of the four men and seven women he depicted, almost
all have lost their spouses. are in periods of extended
mourning for their life companions.
Family history
The saga of Neufeld's own family
follows this same basic pattern. It is as dramatic -
and bittersweet - as that of anyone portrayed in his
series of Holocaust portraits.
His mother, Franka, spent much of the war in the ghetto
at Lodz, Poland, whics second in size and longevity
only to the Warsaw ghetto.
The Lodz ghetto was liquidated
in 1944, explained Neufeld's sister, Sandra Hoffman,
who serves as the family historian and is president
of The Generation After, an organization of children
of Holocaust survivors.
During the war, Hoffman reported,
Franka was transported to a number of camps, including
Auschwitz-Birkenau and Bergen-Belsen. She was liberated
in May, 1945, from yet another camp and taken to a displaced-persons
facility. There Franka received the awful news that
all of the remaining members of her family, including
her father, mother and siblings, had vanished during
the war. She, alone, was still alive.
Leo and Sandra's father, William
Neufeld, had an equally mind-numbing story William grew
up in a small city named Zawiercie, not far from Krakow.
He was taken into custody by the authorities late in
1941 and held in six different concentration camps,
the most well wn of which was Buchenwald in Germany.
A month before the end of the
war iam was with a group of inmates who were being moved
to yet another location in the face of oncoming troops.
At this point, while walking through a rural area, William
and another prisoner managed to escape.
They took refuge in arn whose
owner - a local farmer - took pity on them. He protected
them from the authorities and brought them food and
drink.
Ironically, when the area was
liberated by American GIs, William had to prove to them
that he was Jewish because he not an occupant of a camp.
Emigrated to St. Paul
Neither Franka nor William ever
went back to their former homes in Poland. Instead, having met in the displaced-persons
facility, they were married. Sandra was born in 1948.
The following year the family
emigrated from Germany to the United States with the
helpembers of the Jewish community in St. Paul, Minn.
After six months in St., where Leo was born in 1950,
the Neufelds moved to Milwaukee, where William's brother
was already l established.
The brothers went on to own and
operate a successful construction business, Neufeld
Brothers, together.
Not too shabby, said Hoffman, for a poor young Polish
couple who had landed in America with no money, no mastery
of the English language and little more than the clothes
on their backs.
Neufeld's now-completed Holocaust
portrait project is only part of an ongoing et to document
Jewish history in Milwaukee and Wisconsin.
Oral histories of personalities
prominent in the life of the city's Jewish community
are currently being captured on videotapa crew from
the Milwaukee Jewish Historical Society, which is, like
the Coalition for Jewish Learning, an affiliate of the
Milwaukee Jewish Federation.
The resultant archive of tapes
is open to serious researchers and students of Jewish
cultural history.
E-mail: jauer@journalsentinel.com
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