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Oral history interview with Esther Lurie

Oral History | Digitized | Accession Number: 2005.604.9 | RG Number: RG-50.641.0003

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    Oral history interview with Esther Lurie

    Overview

    Interview Summary
    Esther Lurie discusses leaving Belgium, where she was studying art, to visit her family in Kovno in 1939; how she was unable to leave Kovno once the war began, despite having a British passport; painting large portraits of Stalin for the National Theatre during the Russian occupation; feeling protected by the non aggression pact between Stalin and Hitler; how her husband was sent to work in a factory and eventually executed along with 500 intellectuals; the bombing of Kovno and arrival of the Germans; being imprisoned and forced to wear a yellow star upon her release; being sent to the Kovno Ghetto where she remained with her sister and her sister’s baby; documenting in art what was happening in ghetto; meeting Avraham Tory with whom she discussed the need to record events; drawing people gathering potatoes in the fields; hungry crowds, soup lines, and the bridge separating the ghetto from the Aryan side; entering people’s apartments in order to draw without being seen; advice from Tory about specific scenes to record; working as a slave laborer and drawing in her time off; how the Germans discovered that she was an artist, gave her extra bread rations and organized an art studio where she had to copy Old Master drawings for them; cooperation of the Jewish police with Germans; the execution of many of the ghettos children in the Ninth Fort; the reaction of the parents who returned from work to find their children gone; burying her drawings; how Tory had her drawings photographed prior to leaving the ghetto; recovering 30-40 of the drawings after the war and reconstructing others from photographs; the liquidation of the ghetto in 1944; being deported with her sister and nephew to Stuffhof concentration camp; the death of her sister and nephew in Auschwitz; hiding 12 works of art with Lithuanian women; finding the 12 works 40 years later and exhibiting them in the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum’s exhibition on the Kovno Ghetto; her dedication to perpetuate the memory of the Holocaust; and her feelings of guilt for having survived.
    Interviewee
    Lurie, Esther
    Date
    interview:  approximately 1997
    Credit Line
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, acquired from Herb Krosney

    Physical Details

    Language
    English
    Genre/Form
    Documentary films.
    Extent
    2 digital files : MP4.

    Rights & Restrictions

    Conditions on Access
    There are no known restrictions on access to this material.
    Conditions on Use
    Restrictions on use. Herb Krosney produced this collection for use in the History Channel film Kovno Ghetto: A Buried History. Mr. Krosney retains copyright on the interviews.

    Keywords & Subjects

    Geographic Name
    Kaunas (Lithuania)
    Personal Name
    Lurie, Esther.

    Administrative Notes

    Holder of Originals
    Herb Krosney
    Provenance
    The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum received the oral history interview with Esther Lurie in 2005. The interview was produced in ca. 1997 for use in the film Kovno Ghetto: A Buried History.
    Record last modified:
    2023-11-16 09:20:16
    This page:
    http:​/​/collections.ushmm.org​/search​/bookmarks​/irn44268

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