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2012-01-24

An incredible story written in letters

The SOKÓŁ cultural center in the Małoposkie Province in Nowy Sącz has arranged an exhibition called ‘Listy do Sali: Życie młodej kobiety w nazistowskich obozach pracy’ (Eng. Letters to Sala: the life of a young woman in Nazi labor camps), which deals with a woman who survived seven concentration camps. The display was mounted in 2006 by the French Children of the Holocaust Foundation, the New York Public Library and the Jewish Galicia Museum in Krakow. Jill Vexler is the exhibition’s curator.

Ilustracja

Sala Garncarz was only sixteen years old when in 1940 she was deported from her hometown of Sosnowiec to the labor camp in Geppersdorf (presently Rzędziwojowice). For the successive five years; she survived seven camps. At that time, she collected over three hundred and fifty letters, photographs and documents that comprise a unique historical source today.

The exhibition showcases all of the correspondence belonging to Sala Garncarz-Kirchner, who was born in Sosnowiec and lived there till 1940. This collection comprises more than three hundred and fifty letters, postcards, documents and pictures that were sent to her by her family and friends from her hometown at the time when she was confined in labor camps between 1940 and 1945. The collection is a remarkable testimony, showing a dramatic fate of a young girl in the context of the situation of Jews who lived in Silesian towns during World War II.

The exhibition runs till February 12th.

For more information go to the website of MCK Sokół

 

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