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Is Evidence from a War-Crimes Tribunal Art?

JL;DR SUMMARY Henryk Ross, a Jewish photojournalist, survived the Lodz ghetto partly because his skills were exploited by the Nazis for propaganda. A way out west there was a fella, fella I want to tell you about, fella by the name of Jeff Lebowski. At least, that was the handle his lovin' parents gave him, but he never had much use for it himself. This Lebowski, he called himself the Dude. Now, Dude, that's a name no one would self-apply where I come from. But then, there was a lot about the Dude that didn't make a whole lot of sense to me. And a lot about where he lived, likewise. But then again, maybe that's why I found the place s'durned innarestin'.

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Tags

Jewish HistoryNazi PropagandaLodz GhettoCultural MemoryEichmann TrialSurvival Through ArtHenryk RossHolocaust PhotographyArt As TestimonyMoral Implications Of Art

Places mentioned

Łódź, Poland
"Henryk Ross testified at the Eichmann trial. His qualification for that dubious honor was to have been one of the few thousand souls to survive the Lodz ghetto, where more than 200,000 Polish Jews died of starvation and disease or were dispatched to the Nazi extermination camps."
Israel
"He never took another picture, though he did show some of his photographs at Eichmanns trial in Israel."
Canada
"(Ross died in Canada in 1991.)"
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
"Memory Unearthed, a show of some of Rosss photographs which opens this weekend at MFA Boston after a stint at its originating Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO), unfolds in three gray-clad rooms in the museums contemporary-art wing, starting with a wall-size depiction of the unearthing of the negatives."

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Cairo Item ID 84948
Cairo Source ID 10
Retrieved 2026-06-16 05:31:47 UTC
Curated 2026-06-16 08:32:07 UTC