|
Films Show Skewed Version
of the Holocaust
Wall Street Journal. 9 Jabuary
2003
By THANE ROSENBAUM
Ever since Steven Spielberg's
‘Schindler's List’, the Holocaust in film -- actually
the Holocaust itself -- has never been the same. For
decades it had been virtually a silent movie -- images
in our heads with no sound, a secret but unspoken language,
even within the Holocaust survivor community. Everyone
was awed by the moral implications of mass murder on
such a grand scale. To speak of the Holocaust demanded
great humility, which almost everyone exercised -- artist
and layman alike.
But ‘Schindler's List’ slowly
domesticated and democratized what had once been forbidden.
Suddenly the Holocaust was on everyone's mind, and a
source of inspiration for every artist. Even the survivors
themselves began to speak, their testimonies filmed
for archival purposes. (Ironically, many of these films
were funded by the proceeds from ‘Schindler's List’,
which spawned an intensive effort to collect survivor
testimonies, a project that was distinct from Claude
Lanzmann's earlier documentary, ‘Shoah,’ which combined
both artistic and archival elements.) Everything about
the Holocaust was now fair game in either educating
the public or firing the imagination. The Italian comedy
‘Life Is Beautiful’ and the commercial success of the
Broadway musical ‘The Producers’ were offspring of this
fertile, if not impious, era.
Now there are several new Holocaust
films: Werner Herzog's ‘Invincible’; Tim Blake Nelson's
‘The Grey Zone’; Roman Polanski's ‘The Pianist’; and
opening on Jan. 24 in New York and Los Angeles, Costa-Gavras's
"Amen." Each represents a slightly new shift
in the direction of the genre and the moral challenges
that Holocaust narratives invariably represent.
The problem with ‘Schindler's
List’ is that the Holocaust is not about rescue and
redemption, while the movie is. Indeed, there were rare
occasions of virtue, but the calling card of the Nazis
and their abetters was one of mass murder and moral
failure. You can't claim to make a Holocaust movie if
an audience leaves its seat feeling hopeful about humanity.
The impulse to honor the good in man is noble, but disingenuous
and misapplied when depicting an atrocity.
Unfortunately we live in an age
where people learn their history from feature films.
This has not served our memories well. It may be too
much to ask film makers to tell the most complete, unwholesome
aspects of a story. But it's worse when they focus instead
on a more palatable, yet unrepresentative slice. The
risk is in misleading the audience, trivializing the
horror, and reducing the madness into something mundane.
These new films are each largely original, ambitious
undertakings by acclaimed directors. But they suffer
from the limitations of ‘Schindler's List.’
‘Invincible’ is actually a pre-Holocaust
tale, set right before the Nazis come to power. It is
the story of a Polish-Jewish strongman who arrives in
Berlin billed as a Teutonic god in an occult cabaret
act. Later he announces his origins and eventually returns
home with a sense of doom, certain that the answer to
Jewish continuity is not in assimilation, but in the
training of a new generation of Jewish Samsons.
‘The Grey Zone’ takes a similar position on Jewish empowerment,
though in Auschwitz, of all places, and among already
condemned men. The film is a moral examination of the
Sonderkommando, squads of Jewish prisoners who worked
the gas chambers and crematoria, essentially doing the
Nazi's dirty work in helping to exterminate Jews.
The film, however, focuses on
a group of street-hustling, foul-mouthed Hungarians
who are planning to revolt but are foiled by the impossibility
of their task and their own moral quandaries. Aside
from setting the film in Auschwitz, which few have dared,
‘The Grey Zone’, with its gray visual look, features
an unusual portrait of those killed in the camp, shifting
the moral choices away from the Germans, and onto the
Jews themselves. And while uprisings make for compelling
drama, they were impossible to orchestrate, which is
why there were so few. Finally, those who survived the
camps were generally the ones who possessed the cunning
and street-smarts of Nelson's characters, and not the
other way around.
Mr. Polanski's film is perhaps
the most personal of the four, largely because he himself
is a Holocaust survivor. Based on Wladyslaw Szpilman's
memoir, it is the story of one of Poland's most accomplished
pianists, a Jew who survived the entire occupation in
Warsaw -- first in the Jewish ghetto, and then on the
other side of the wall. The film is visually stunning,
and there is a real authenticity to the brutality and
inhumanity of life inside the ghetto. But perhaps because
the film is a valentine to Polanski's Poland, non-Jewish
Poles are depicted only as freedom-fighters and rescuers.
The Germans are shown as barbarians, but the attitudes
of Polish citizens, most of whom were either complicit
or indifferent to the fate of their Jewish neighbors,
aren't represented in this movie at all. This skewed
vision of Polish history is perhaps related to the fact
that both Mr. Szpilman and Mr. Polanski himself -- in
their special, rarefied cases -- would not have survived
without the assistance of Polish Catholics. But in their
gratitude lies a distortion that favorably colors the
anti-Semitic attitudes that the vast majority of Poles
had toward Jews.
Finally, ‘Amen’, adapted from
Rolf Hochhuth's play, ‘The Deputy’, is another examination
of the risks of moral choice. A German scientist recruited
by the SS, and a young Jesuit priest -- both religious
men of conscience -- learn that the Jews of Europe are
being gassed. They seek to warn the Allies and the pope,
and are met with silence and indifference. The murder
machine grinds on, with so few willing to stand in its
way. Mr. Costa-Gavras never shows the camps or the dead
bodies, just the futility amid all the surrender. The
impulse toward focusing on the redemptive, heroic rescuer
is there, but at least the film doesn't sugarcoat the
ultimate result.
As a group, these films are visually
daring and morally complex, and have expanded the images
and messages that Holocaust films normally project,
without winning, as of yet -- certainly in the case
of ‘Invincible’ and ‘The Grey Zone’ -- any significant
audiences. (‘Max’, which opened recently as well, has
peripheral Holocaust implications, focusing on Hitler
in his youth and his friendship with a sympathetic Jewish
art dealer. Of course, anything that humanizes Hitler
and his prior friendships with Jews is like fictionalizing
Osama bin Laden as a former struggling waiter in Windows
on the World, waiting to get home to his MTV.)
Yet authenticity and history is
a hard sell in a motion picture. Each film owes its
allegiance to ‘Schindler's List’ for widening the lens.
The question is whether that is such a good thing.
Mr. Rosenbaum is a novelist
and essayist. His most recent novel is ‘The Golems of
Gotham’
Reply to the above article
by Ewa Wypijewska Clarke
Righteous Among Nations: Poles
Who Rescued Jews
The Wall Street Journal, January
20, 2003
Polish Catholics helping Jews
were not ‘special, rarefied cases’, as Thane Rosenbaum
states in his essay ‘Films
Show Skewed Version of the Holocaust’ (Leisure &
Arts, Jan. 9). Polish Catholics and Polish Jews were
neighbors and friends facing the same terrors inflicted
by the invading German and Russian armies during World
War II. In fact, Polish Catholics were the first victims
of the concentration camps. Eleven million lives were
lost during the Holocaust -- six million of those were
Poles, and half of those were not Jews.
All Polish people suffered enormously
during the war, Jews and non-Jews. My Catholic family
was no exception. One part of our family was deported
to Siberian workcamps. The relatives who stayed in Poland
became prisoners in their own villages along with their
Jewish friends and neighbors. My aunt, Maria Frackowiak,
risked her life and that of her family by smuggling
food into the ghetto, and then hiding 16 people in her
laundry building. When Jewish strangers showed up seeking
a safe haven, she convinced her sister and other neighbors
to provide hiding places too. They did this because
‘it was the right thing to do’.
My aunt is one of 5,624 Polish
people remembered for their heroic actions during the
war by Yad Vashem. Her name is one of 16,542 remembered
heroes called Righteous Among Nations inscribed in the
memorial at the Holocaust Museum in Washington. Poland
was the only country where helping a Jew was a crime
punishable by death to the helper, as well as his or
her entire family. Yet Poland has the largest number
of recognized ‘righteous among nations’.
Eva Wypijewska Clarke
Richmond, Va.
January 21, 2003
Mr. Paul E. Steiger
Managing Editor
Wall Street Journal
200 Liberty Street
New York, NY 10281
Dear Mr. Steiger:
The National Polish American-Jewish
American Council, which for more than two decades has
been working to facilitate dialogue and cooperation
between the Polish and Jewish communities in the U.S.,
has read with sadness and dismay Thane Rosenbaum’s review
of Roman Polanski's film "The Pianist" (Leisure
& Arts, January 9, 2003).
Mr. Rosenbaum’s asserts that
the film presents a "skewed vision of Polish history"
and that most Poles were either “complicit or indifferent
to the fate of their Jewish neighbors”. These simplistic
statements are offensive and misleading and ignore the
realities that are far more complicated.
The reaction of the Polish population
to the extermination of their Jewish countrymen covered
the whole spectrum of human responses. On the one hand,
there were Poles who harbored and rescued Jews and actively
participated in Zegota, the Council for Aid to Jews,
which was established by the Polish government-in-exile.
On the other hand, there was approval and even complicity.
While under the ruthless occupation
of Nazi Germany, the majority of Poles did nothing—neither
aiding nor harming Jews. Was this inaction proof of
callous indifference or were there possibly other contributing
factors? Certainly, helplessness played a part. And
fear! The Nazi killing apparatus, which murdered some
three million non-Jewish Poles, made aiding a Jew a
crime punishable by on the spot execution of the ‘transgressor’
and his or her entire family. This was true nowhere
else in Europe.
Respectfully,
 |
 |
Martin I. Bresler Co-Chairman |
John J. Pikarski, Jr. |
|