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Visions of death in the colours of life

March 8, 2013 11:00
‘Marianná Langová 1932-44, from Theresien’s children’s drawings

ByMoris Farhi, Moris Farhi

1 min read

The Metropolis of Death (a fitting designation for the Auschwitz complex) offers reflections on the Holocaust by the eminent, Czech-born Israeli historian, Otto Dov Kulka.

Kulka was transferred, when still a boy of 10, from Theresienstadt to Auschwitz-Birkenau where he miraculously survived in Block BIIb — the “family camp”— for 15 months.

Over 30 years, pursuing a career as a historian of the Holocaust, Kulka kept his own experiences sheltered in “a dimension of silence”. Then, in 1978, after attending an international conference in Poland, he felt compelled to visit Birkenau.

The landscape that confronted him was not the Abaddon of his boyhood, but its ruins. And there, Kulka’s journey began to redress a time when “the immutable law of the Great Death” ruled.