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Thessaloniki, Greece. Holocaust Memorial "Menorah in Flames," Nandor Glid, sculptor, 1997. Photo: Samuel Gruber 2022. |
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Thessaloniki, Greece. Holocaust Memorial "Menorah in Flames," Nandor Glid, sculptor, 1997. Photo: Samuel Gruber 2022. |
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Report from Thessaloniki 1:
Menorah in Flames: Nandor Glid's Holocaust Memorial in
Thessaloniki
By Samuel D. Gruber
One of the most prominent and certainly artistically
accomplished Holocaust memorials in Greece is the memorial titled Menorah in
Flames by the Serbian Jewish sculptor Nandor Glid installed in Thessaloniki in
1997 and then moved to its present location in 2007.
Glid, who was a Hungarian Jew from Subotica (now Serbia)
lost his entire family at Auschwitz. He was sent to a labor camp in Szeged (Hungary), from which he escaped before joining Tito's partisans with
whom he fought for several years and was wounded in 1945. After the war he studied sculpture, and by the 1950s he
established himself as one of the most expressive and creative Jewish artists
of the post-war generation. He is best known for his sculpture at the
Mauthausen (1957) and Dachau (1965-68) concentration camps. Subsequently he
made several other Holocaust memorials, which embrace a more symbolic language.
The one in Thessaloniki was his last. He died in 1997 before it was cast in
bronze, and his sons completed the project.
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Dachau, Germany. Holocaust memorial sculpture," Nandor Glid, sculptor, 1965-68. Photo: Samuel Gruber 2006 | .
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Dachau, Germany. Holocaust memorial sculpture," Nandor Glid, sculptor, 1965-68. Photo: Samuel Gruber 2006. |
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Thessaloniki, Greece. Holocaust Memorial "Menorah in Flames," Nandor Glid, sculptor, 1997. Photo: Samuel Gruber 2022. |
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hessaloniki, Greece. Holocaust Memorial "Menorah in Flames," Nandor Glid, sculptor, 1997. Photo: Samuel Gruber 2022. |
Glid's striking monuments have come to represent a particular
era of Holocaust remembrance that allowed the melding of abstract and
representational elements to address suffering and horror more directly without
undo distance, sentimentality, or romanticizing.
Until a visit in May, I'd only known the Thessaloniki
memorial from photos, but most of the photos published of Glid’s work do not do
justice to the complex expressive detail that is evident in the patterns of the
work and in the emotional power of the abstracted human figures which are
caught up in the inextricable net of wire (in the case of Dachau) or fire (in
the in the case of Thessaloniki).
The tangle of figures here recalls those in the Dachau
Memorial. Both refer directly to the unforgettable images of piles of emaciated
corpses found when the Camps were liberated. The title too, encourages the
viewer to see a menorah and thus overlook the tortured figures entangled within
the work.
From the photos, too, I had always imagined this to be a
larger work. It is of good size, but it's prominent location and its formal
qualities - that is, the way it expands outward and upward from a narrow base -
suggested something larger and loftier. In fact, it is set almost at ground
level and the viewer approaches and looks at the monument head on. This is
extremely effective because we encounter the anguished faces of the victims.
Close up, once sees less of the menorah form and more of the thicket of flames
and limbs and human heads.
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Thessaloniki, Greece. Holocaust Memorial "Menorah in Flames," Nandor Glid, sculptor, 1997. Photo: Samuel Gruber 2022. |
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Thessaloniki, Greece. Holocaust Memorial "Menorah in Flames," Nandor Glid, sculptor, 1997. Photo: Samuel Gruber 2022. |
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Thessaloniki, Greece. Holocaust Memorial "Menorah in Flames," Nandor Glid, sculptor, 1997. Photo: Samuel Gruber 2022. |
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Thessaloniki, Greece. Holocaust Memorial "Menorah in Flames," Nandor Glid, sculptor, 1997. Photo: Samuel Gruber 2022. |
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The work was originally installed in a public square named
in 1996 as the “Square of the Jewish Martyrs of the Holocaust.” This was done
in anticipation of Thessaloniki holding the title European Cultural Capital in
1997. The city was shamed into remembering. In that year (1997) the Greek
government installed Glid’s sculpture in the square as the first public
recognition of the deportation and murder of more than 50,000 Jews – a large
segment of the city’s population.
Unfortunately, the monument was often
vandalized so in 2005 it was moved to its present more visible location on
Plateia Eleftherias (Freedom Square), facing the waterfront. The new setting
has some significance to the suffering of the city’s Jews. On July 11, 1942,
the German occupiers of the city held 9,000 Jewish men here and subjected them
to a degrading registration process in blazing heat. Today, most of the large
square is a parking lot, but (unlike Sopron) the monument is screened off from
the cars.
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Thessaloniki, Greece. Holocaust Memorial "Menorah in Flames," Nandor Glid, sculptor, 1997. Photo: Samuel Gruber 2022. |
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Thessaloniki, Greece. Holocaust Memorial "Menorah in Flames," Nandor Glid, sculptor, 1997. Photo: Samuel Gruber 2022. |
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Two plaques affixed to base of monument refer to the
original installation and its removal and new dedication. The first, written in
Greek and English, solely remembers the victims:
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Thessaloniki, Greece. Holocaust Memorial "Menorah in Flames," Nandor Glid, sculptor, 1997. Photo: Samuel Gruber 2022. |
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The second, in Greek, Hebrew, and English, commemorates a
moment in contemporary (2006) Greek and Israeli politics:
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Thessaloniki, Greece. Holocaust Memorial "Menorah in Flames," Nandor Glid, sculptor, 1997. Photo: Samuel Gruber 2022. |
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Perhaps the truest form
of memorial in the city is the Jewish Museum of Thessaloniki, opened in 2001,
the tells the millennia-long history of the community as well as of its
destruction. The museum, of which I plan to write more about in another post,
culminates in a memorial room fo names created form the decades-long research
of Auschwitz survivor Heinz Kounio, who has collected definitive information on
37,000 individual victims, although it is known that thousands more remain undocumented.
Kounio was one of the first Greeks to tell his story of survival.
His memoir was published in Greek in 1981, and subsequently in an abbreviated
English version in 2003 titled A Liter of Soup and Sixty Grams of Bread: The
Diary of Prisoner Number 109565 (Sephardic House and Bloch Publishing,
2003). Kounio is also featured in the 2019 documentary film Heroes
of Salonika. Heinz’s daughter Hella Matalon, an expert on Jewish
Thessaloniki, was my guide in Thessaloniki for the day.
Learning the identities of Salonika victims has been difficult.
One needs to know multiple languages, including Greek, Ladino, French, Hebrew,
and German. Archives and records were destroyed or are inaccessible This was
compounded by the common practice of repeating widely family names within extended
families. Thus, it was not enough to know a name, it was necessary to learn
birth dates and addresses and other information. Thus, researching victims
created many data points that begin to sketch the depth of the Jewish
community. Numbers become names and names become individuals with their own
biographies.
Kounio has been at this work for many years, and it will have to
continue for years when he is gone.
There are several other Holocaust memorials scattered about
Thessaloniki. But no amount of commemoration can give a true indication of the
size and importance of the Thessaloniki Jewish population which was deported
and murdered in 1942. The destruction of Thessaloniki’s Jewish community tore
the heart and soul of the Sephardi and Ladino culture. Even though the
community had suffered other calamities in the previous half century, the
murder of the community marked the end of remarkable Jewish culture and civilization.
Yes, there are descendants of Thessaloniki Jews living today around the world,
but whatever they create cannot replicate what was lost in lives, language and
culture.
After World War II, so few Jews lived in the city where once
they had constituted the majority of the population, that they were hardly
noticed, and the Jewish history of Thessaloniki was virtually erased. Jews have
lived in the city for millennia. the Christian New Testament records that Saint
Paul preached in a synagogue in Thessaloniki in the 1st century C.E.
Since the 1990s, there have been many efforts by the city of
Thessaloniki, the Greek Jewish community, and many Greek Jews living abroad to
rectify the situation. Very slowly, monuments and memorials have been erected
to Holocaust victims, synagogues have been restored, and new museums and
exhibitions have opened. Still while this more evident Jewish presence has
informed and educated many, it also regularly provokes resistance. Greek
Holocaust memorials have been often vandalized. This does not represent the
attitude of most Greeks; but it is evidence of a persistent stream of
antisemitism among a section of the population. In the past fifty years,
Antisemitism and anti-Israel sentiment have been used politically by both the
Greek Right and Left.
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