Pictures of Resistance: The Wartime Photographs of Faye Schulman To exhibit at Oshman Family JCC, Taube Koret Campus for Jewish Life in Palo Alto
from July 14 – August 12, 2010.
Opening reception Thursday July 15, 6-8 pm
Opening reception Thursday July 15, 6-8 pm
Faye Schulman became a war documentarian at grave risk to her own life. During World War II there were approximately 20,000-30,000 Jewish boys and girls who escaped the German ghettos and work camps and formed and joined organized, armed resistance groups. These resistance fighters were called partisans. Faye Schulman was one such partisan.
After the ghetto was liquidated and her family murdered she escaped. Faye Schulman was with the Russian Molatava partisan brigade, whose encampment was near her hometown, of Lenin (formerly Poland) from 1942-1944. Along with serving as a doctor’s aid, Schulman also took photographs, developing and printing the two-inch negatives beneath blankets in the forest. Faye Schulman was one of the only – perhaps the only -- Jewish partisan photographer who captured Jewish resistance during the Holocaust.
"Pictures of Resistance” has exhibited in ten cities around the world including Zurich, Switzerland and Tel Aviv, Israel. It continues to draw international acclaim and media attention, bringing JPEF's work to more and more communities
“Often we hear of Jews as victims, but the stories portrayed in the exhibit spoke of Jews as heroes," said Brandeis graduate student Jessica Levine. "It gave me a new, different Holocaust story to tell, one of resistance and resilience. It made me feel proud to be a Jew."
For more information about the exhibit contact Jan@jewishpartisans.org
Oshman Family JCC Taube Koret Campus for Jewish Life 3921 Fabian Way Palo Alto, CA 94303
The exhibit at the Oshman Family JCC is sponsored by the Richard and Rhoda Goldman Fund
The exhibit is made possible through the generous contributions of
Thomas and Johanna Baruch, the Epstein/Roth Foundation, the Koret
Foundation, the Purjes Foundation, the Charles and Lynn Schusterman
Family Foundation, the Taube Foundation for Jewish Life & Culture,
the Holocaust Council of MetroWest, and Diane and Howard Wohl.