NOVANEWS
By: Paul Eisen
This appeared in Y.Net Israel News.com – obviously a Jewish publication.
It shows images taken by German soldiers during their occupation of Poland. I’ve left everything as it is in the article but, if you can, try to look at each image before reading the text. Then, read the text. Do you, like me, find that, in some cases, overly sinister meanings are put onto some of the images?
This, of course, brings to mind all those iconic Holocaust images – trains, chimneys, piles of shoes, eye-glasses etc. Is it not strange how these, on the surface, entirely neutral images are portrayed as evidence of this or that?
And I have to go on to those truly horrific Holocaust images we all know so well. We’ve been led to make so many assumptions without ever reallly knowing who those poor people were, and exactly why those awful things happened to them.
The camera never lies, but people do so, whatever your views may be on the veracity or otherwise of the Holocaust, surely we can all agree we need more open enquiry?
This, of course, brings to mind all those iconic Holocaust images – trains, chimneys, piles of shoes, eye-glasses etc. Is it not strange how these, on the surface, entirely neutral images are portrayed as evidence of this or that?
And I have to go on to those truly horrific Holocaust images we all know so well. We’ve been led to make so many assumptions without ever reallly knowing who those poor people were, and exactly why those awful things happened to them.
The camera never lies, but people do so, whatever your views may be on the veracity or otherwise of the Holocaust, surely we can all agree we need more open enquiry?
Pictures of daily Jewish life during Holocaust hidden in private albums of Wehrmacht soldiers for years. Dariusz Dekiert, a devout Christian from Poland, locates and hands them over to Shem Olam Institute. ‘I see it as rectification,’ he tells Yedioth Ahronoth
Like children their age all over the world in recent decades, these children too stood in front of a photographer, followed his orders and smiled. The result appeared almost routine, but there is nothing routine about this photo.
It is a picture of Jewish children during the Holocaust. The photographer is a German Wehrmacht soldier. One frozen moment in the hell Europe’s Jews went through.

Most album owners, Shem Olam officials say, seek to get rid of the pictures linking their family members to Nazi Germany.






_wa.jpg)










In some pictures the Jews seem unafraid of the soldiers. In others, their facial expressions point to fear, embarrassment and humiliation.
The story of the man who found these pictures is as fascinating as the photos themselves. Dariusz Dekiert, a 39-year-old Polish citizen who visited Israel this week as a guest of the Shem Olam Institute, is a devout Christian. Locating more and more items from those dark days has virtually become his life’s work.
“I have a feeling that this world has chosen me,” he says. “All I wanted to do was learn, and the science of Judaism was the subject I found easiest to get into. So I started learning and was drawn in.”

























Dariusz quickly learned Hebrew, Yiddish and even Aramaic, in a bid to translate the Talmud into Polish in the future. After completing his studies he settled in Lodz. He worked as a lecturer at the university, and after being authorized by the Polish justice minister to work as a professional translator he founded a company offering Hebrew-to-Polish and Polish-to-Hebrew translations.
His current job, he tells Yedioth Ahronoth, combines his great loves – history, geography and Judaism.
“As part of my work I locate documents, photos, objects and historical material which were left in Poland and are now in private hands, and hold negotiations to obtain them,” he says. “It involves a lot of patience and negotiation skills. In Poland and Germany there are tens of thousands of pictures of Jews taken by German soldiers who have already aged or died.”
What is the most emotionally moving item you found?
“A suitcase that arrived from the Lodz Ghetto, which I bought from a private person. It was empty and appeared to have been through hardships, and it had a clue leading to a name I couldn’t identify. The person who sold it to me said his father had stolen it from Jews who got on the train to Auschwitz. After searching for a long time, the Shem Olam Institute managed to locate relatives of the suitcase owners in Israel, and the fact that it was returned to Jewish hands moved me to tears.
“Another object I was moved by was a jewel created from two Polish coins combined together. The bridge of the Lodz Ghetto was sketched on the rear side of the coins with the inscription, ‘To my beloved mother.’ Unfortunately, we have no way of locating the source of the jewel.”
Today Dariusz lives near the Jewish community in Lodz. “I see my work as rectification,” he says, “especially when it comes to returning the pictures of Jews during the Holocaust to Jewish hands.”
And what does your family think about your job?
“At first they found it odd, but they’ve gotten used to it by now.”