48 Friday, July 22, 1977 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS . Mendel Grossman's Courage and Martyrdom: He Portrayed Anguish of Holocaust 'With a Camera in the Ghetto' Mendel Grossman is a name that will be recorded with glory in the history of resistance to Nazism and of an heroic photographer who has contributed immensely towards recording the ter- ror that was Nazism. There were many ways of resisting the horrors that were perpetrated by the Germans during World War II. Grossman's was not by means of a gun. He used a camera. He was a martyr who was determined to por- tray the occurrences in the Lodz Ghetto. His volumi- nous attainments were de- stroyed, but enough were re- tained to perpetuate the story of the terror as well as of the life of the Jews in that ghetto. "With a Camera in the Ghetto," the very deeply moving collection of the Grossman photographs and of the Lodz Ghetto suffer- ers, emerges as one of the most deeply moving books about the Holocaust. In the Lodz Ghetto, the first set up for Jews of Po- land by the Nazis, 43,000 died of hunger and thou- sands more were sent to the German extermination camps. Grossman was the brave photographer who devoted the last years of his life to the dangerous task of tak- ing pictures of the victims of the Nazis. He had a hid- den camera with which he made his rounds. He risked his life and he kept photo- graphing. The 70 rescued photos in "With a Camera in the Ghetto" serve as in- erasable additional evi- dence of what had tran- spired during the years of the agonies that were caused by the Hitler hordes. This Schocken Books vol- ume was edited by Zvi Szner and Alexander Sened. The appended story is addi- tionally dramatized by the inclusion of the text of "The Chronicle of Lodz Ghetto." This accurate his- torical account was edited by Lucjan Dobroszycki and Danuta Dombrowska. Fortunately for the histori- cal record, the facts about Grossman also are included in this volume, as an appen- dix of the life of the heroic photographer. Grossman was a respect- ed Polish artist and photog- rapher. In 1939, his work re- ceived critical acclaim and his career was beginning. In 1940 he was imprisoned in the Lodz Ghetto. Grossman worked in the ghetto's department of sta- tistics and there he had access to photographic equipment. Most of the photos he took, however, were not for the German de- partment's records. Gross- man traveled with a cam- era hidden beneath his coat and secretly snapped pic- tures that he then hid in round tins. He took tre- mendous risks, often photo- graphing in view of Ger- man police, and he sub- jected himself to physical dangers; such as walking over rooftops and climbing church steeples. Afflicted by a heart ail- ment, Grossman persisted in photographing the ghetto from its beginning in 1940, when 160,000 Jews were im- prisoned within an area----ol- 1.5 square miles, almost to its end, in 1945, when 887 survivors were liberated. He was known by many within the ghetto and be- loved ior his labors. Before being evacuated from Lodz, Grossman hid in a window sill the 10,000 negatives he had accumu- lated during his five years within the ghetto. After the war, his sister retrieved the negatives from the window sill and sent them to Israel to be stored on a kibutz, but all of the negatives were de- stroyed when the k ibutz fell into Egyptian hands dur- ing the War of Independ- ence. Several days before the German surrender, Gross- man collapsed and died dur- ing a forced march on a road outside a work camp in Germany. He was 32 years old; his camera was still with him. The photograph above, from "With a Camera in the Ghetto," taken by Mendel Grossman in the Lodz Ghetto, depicts the agony and frustration felt by the more than 160,000 Jews of the ghetto. Brzezinski Predicts Congeniality Between Carter, Begin; Predicts Palestinian Homeland Will Be Linked to Jordan By TRUDE B. FELDMAN The Jewish News Special Israel Correspondent WASHINGTON, D.C. — Dr. Zbigniew Brzezinski, President Carter's national security adviser, described new Israeli Prime Minister Menahem Begin as having some of the same character- istics in common with the President of the United States. "I'm personally acquaint- ed with the prime minister and know him to be a for- thright and direct person. He has certain deeply-held beliefs. In that sense, he is much like Jimmy Carter, who also has deeply-held be- liefs and who is forthright and who speaks with can- dor." Dr. Brzezinski predicts that President Carter and Prime Minister Begin—who was scheduled to visit Wash- ington this week will dis- cuss "things openly and frankly. They may disagree on a number of issues, but personally, the two men will get along." Dr. Brzezinski, who vis- ited Israel last year, is a na- tive of Warsaw, Poland. He came to North America at age 10. During the Presiden- tial election of 1968, he di- rected foreign policy task forces for Vice President Hubert Humphrey, and was a member of the foreign and defense policy task force for then Presidential candidate Jimmy Carter. Reacting to claims that Begin's victory was due, in part, to fears by the Is- raelis, that the United ZBIGNIEW BRZEZINSKI States was putting too much pressure on Israel, the foreign policy expert said that from all he has noted, including Israeli pub- lic opinion polls, that "domes- tic issues and factors were the paramount reasons" for Shimon Peres' defeat. Turning to the question of Begin's insistence on retain- ing the West Bank as a per- manent part of Israel, Dr. Brzezinski said that Prime Minister Begin has in- dicated that he is approach- ing any possible negotia- tions on the basis of UN Resolution 242 and that he has been very explicit on that. On the question of a home- land for the Palestinians, Dr. Brzezinski stated: "We want to resolve the issue of the Palestinians in such a way that they don't become a political force dedicated to increasingly effective ef- forts to threaten Israel. Therefore, they have to have some sort of an ar- rangement within which they can feel at home. It would be more stable, and more acceptable if such an arrangement was related in some fashion to the king- dom of Jordan." He added that it is for the Israelis to negotiate as to what is more likely to en- dure, to be stable and to pose the least security threat to Israel. "We feel that any ar- rangement for the Palesti- nians will be better if it in- volves some relationship with Jordan," he said. "Also, anything that is con- trived for the Palestinians in that context ought to in- clude extensive demilitariza- tion, security arrange- ments, patrolling rights, transitional defense em- placements, security lines beyond mutually recognized borders, a complex of arrangements the total ef- fect of which would be to provide Israel with the secu- rity it needs, and to which it is entitled, and which it now enjoys on the basis of the present status which has the disadvantage of being not founded on the termi- nation of hostilities and which, therefore, runs the risk of degenerating into a war." Explaining his inter- pretation of the two United Nations resolutions (242 and 338) dealing with the 1967 war, Dr. Brzezinski said that they make it clear that a peace settlement will in- volve the trading of terri- tories for a peace settle- ment. Should a Middle East war break out, will the United States lend support militar- tween the conflicting par- will have to include, as the ily? ties. essential point of departure, 'It's just beyond a shad- a comprehensive peace However, he denied that ow of a doubt that the treaty including mutual rec- the Administration is trying United States stands behind ognition and comprehensive to force a settlement in the Israel," he concluded. "It's peace treaty including mu- region. an h storical commitment, i tual recognition and com- The Carter Adminis- prehensive relationships which is unalterable." Dr. Brzezinski said that tration's recent statements It's possible and in fact peace in the Middle East on the Middle East have probable th-A. some Arabs will require more than just caused alarm signals in Is- continue to harbor the ex- the end of belligerency. rael and have led the Arab pectation that peace would "Real peace," he said, world to believe that the be stage one and that "has to mean mutual recog- United States is pushing Is- only it'll lead to stage two, name- nition of the permanence of rael into accepting a solu- ly the liquidation of Israel. a settlement, mutual recog- tion favorable to Arab inter- "That's why we feel that nition of the existence of est. any peace arrangement has the parties to that settle- In response to these to be a self-enforcing one, ment, the undertaking of a mounting fears, Dr. Brze- so that over time the Arab comprehensive political, dip- dream for stage two be- lomatic, commercial and so- zinski concluded: "I hope comes increasinly an unre- cial relationships, and so this isn't the impression forth." al one and simply fades as they have gotten. We have Addressing himself to the peace. becomes more and made it clear that any set- question of what assurances tlement between the parties more entrenched." he has from the Arabs that they are prepared to make this kind of peace, he sai d that "in conversations we've had with Arab lea d- ers, a willingness on their BY MOSHE RON butz and 10 Palmach fight- part in favor of such an ar- The Jewish News Special ers were killed, with many rangement has been noted. Israel Correspondent " d the pur ose of ne o- TEL AVIV—Three years others wounded and taken tiations would to test the - ago the Ihud ha butz prisoner. degree of their willingness. movement rebuilt Kibutz - The Arab Legion plun- If they are prepared to go Gezer, which was aban- dered and destroyed the set- down this path, that's all to doned in the 1960s. New im- tlement, but immediately the good. If, in negotiations, migrants from the U.S. and after the destruction a Pal- it becomes clear they are Canada first settled there mach unit reoccupied the Id- not, then it's obvious there and other groups followed. butz. would be no settlement." Kibutz Gezer, founded in Gezer was built up again The National Security Ad- 1945 near Rehovot, was an and prospered. But a social viser observed that one of isolated settlement in the crisis broke out amo' the Carter Administration's midst of Arab villages. its members, and goals for a Middle East Members of the -kibutz groups started to leave, _ lowing a general trend peace settlement is to try came from the Youth Aliya and make direct negotia- movement and native-born after the establishment of tions possible by--"reducing Israelis. There were 100 the state. Many kibutz mem- bers left their homes, the gaps over fundamental members, and the kibutz issues between the Arabs started to prosper and de- moved to the cities and looked • for work. and the Israelis." velop. New pioneers three years Then the War of Independ- He added that it was dis- ago came to Gezer with rev- agreement on these funda- ence started. On June 10, olutionary ideas. Some of mental issues that "in the 1948 the Arab Legion at- settlers were leftists past prevented direct dis- tacked Gezer. In isolated the and were of the opinion Gezer there were few men cussions between them." arms: they could not that women had to do the Noting that the Israelis and same jobs as men. A defend themselves against have always said they want the strong and well-armed woman, concentrating on direct negotiations with the units of tne Jordanian Le- the building projects in the Arabs, Dr. Brzezinski, said gion, which shelled the set- kibutz. was appointed as its the (Carter) Administration tlement. Gezer was occu- secretary. Other members is interested in trying to pied by the Arab Legion, wished to keep up Jewish promote a settlement be- after 1(3 members of the ki- traditions. American Immigrants Bring Vitality to Rebuilt Kibutz