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Bisected artwork of 2 boys at a window, with 2 scenes of mass killings painted by a former child partisan

Object | Accession Number: 2006.125.84

Watercolor by Arie Singer depicting himself and his mother? at a window: in the right, 2 panels of the mass shooting of Jews by German soldiers. It was part of a series by Singer, done circa 1985-2000, based upon his memories as a 13 year old partisan fighter in the forests near Vilna, Poland, (Vilnius, Lithuania) and Belarus circa 1943-1944. After the Soviet occupation of Vilna in late 1939, Arie's family fled to Glembokie (Hlybokaye, Belarus). When Germany invaded in June 1941, German mobile killing units, with the help of the local populace, murdered thousands of Jews. Arie and his mother were forced into the Jewish ghetto. His father, Zvi, age 38, was killed in the Ponary massacres in 1941. Arie and his mother, Chaya, age 35, escaped during liquidation of the ghetto. They went into hiding in the Nievier Forest near Vilna, and joined the partisans. The area was liberated by the Red Army in July 1944. After years in dp camps, Arie and Chaya emigrated to Israel in the late 1940s. Colonel Singer began creating this series of paintings about his Holocaust experiences in the mid 1980s as rehabilitation following a stroke in 1975.

Artwork Title
Glembokie Ghetto June 22, 1942, about 3000 people died
Series Title
In Memorium: Glembokie and Vilna
Date
creation:  approximately 1985-2000
depiction:  1942 June 22
Geography
creation: Tel Aviv (Israel)
Language
Hebrew
Classification
Art
Category
Paintings
Object Type
Naive art (aat)
Credit Line
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Arie Singer
 
Record last modified: 2022-08-01 16:28:33
This page: https://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/irn523885