Undiscovered Master SUZANNE CHESSLER Special to the Jewish News A lter Kacyzne spent a good deal of his life photograph- ing the Jewish community of pre-World War II Poyln, Yiddish for Poland. A working pho- tographer, he sold 700 prints to the New York Yiddish daily Forverts, where the goal was to appeal to immi- grant readers who would recall the images left behind. Kacyzne's pictures bring back the day-to-day experiences of the 1920s — peddlers selling their wares out of horse- drawn carts, children wading through a pond, a grandfather looking over a youngster's studies. Together, the photos communicate a lifestyle common to the 3.1 million Jews who lived in Poyln when Kacyzne was in his prime. It's impossible to know how many Kacyzne pictures circulated through- out Poland because the Nazis destroyed them along with the pho- tographer's papers, manuscripts and family documents. In contrast, the photos that came to America were safeguarded very carefully in the archives of the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research in New York. With the encouragement of the photographer's daughter, Sulamita Kacyzne-Reale, chief YIVO archivist Marek,Web put together some 160 photos representative of the artist's work. He also wrote an introduction and some caption information, and is glad the materials are being published this month as a book, titled Poyln: Jewish Life in the Old Country (Metropolitan Books; $50). "We've been trying to produce an album devoted to Kacyzne's art for quite a while, and we've finally realized that," says Web, who picked works conveying many different scenes. "Readers can look to the artistry of the work and the history of the Jews. It rescues the images from oblivion, and it puts the artist on the map." Kacyzne was born in 1885 to a family of Wilno laborers who lived in perpetual poverty. An avid reader, he became fluent in Yiddish, Hebrew, Russian, Polish, German and French. At 14, after his father's death, he was sent to Ukraine, where he became a photographer's apprentice. He also 11/5 1999 32 Detroit Jewish News began to write and publish Russian poetry. The Yiddish stories of Isaac Leib Peretz inspired Kacyzne to move to Warsaw, the center of Yiddish culture, and Kacyzne went on to write plays, short stories, a novel, film scripts, cul- tural and social essays, travel journals and news articles. From 1937-39, he published a 16-page biweekly filled — as if he were doing a painting, according to Web. The photos were influenced by the Dutch masters; Kacyzne's use of light, placement of people and the general mood depicted are reminiscent of paintings by Rembrandt, Vermeer and others. "Kacyzne had a contract of sorts for sending photos planned for the art section of the Forverts," Web says. "The newspaper made the captions more chatty and colorful as well as longer, but we thought it would be better to reinstate the originals, although sometimes we add historical information. Ultimately, the photos speak for themselves. Web remains a Kacyzne fan. "I change my choice of favorite pic- ture from day to day because they are acyzne, Warsaw, w;tii t diitou iw vh as a orskaw ke in 1941. He died a er endurin hours of unspeakable torture an beatings by Ukrainian guards at larnapol's Jewish cemetery, where be had been marched with thousands of other Jews. The young Yiddish poet Nakhrrian Blitz, a survivor of the massacre, published a han-owin account of Kacyzne's last hours in one ofthefirst issues of "Dos nave lebn" (-The N w Lift"), a Yiddish daily. It was among the earliest Holocaust testimonies to appear in print after the fall of the Nazis. Alters wife, Khana, died in the Belzec death camp. His daughter; Sulamita, survived the war dis- guised as a gentile. In 1946, she married the Italian ambassador to Poland, Eugene Reale, and moved to Italy, where she lived until her death earlier this year She devoted much of her life to> preserving her father's literary and artistic gag. ' with his own literary writings and political commentary. Kacyzne continued working as a photographer and traveled around the country to find a vast range of people to immortalize for the Forverts — blacksmiths, spinning women, khey- der boys and politicians. His association with the American newspaper came after a 1921 commis- sion from the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society, which asked that he illustrate the plight of Jews trying to leave Poland. In 1925, he traveled to Palestine as the official Forverts photographer. Kacyzne sold his works to the Forverts for 10 years. He approached that assignment as he did all his work "Many of the pictures were quite pop- ular and well known. During the Holocaust, his pictures became the images of the destroyed world." Besides looking for photos that seemed the best artistically and techni- cally, Web wanted to emphasize Kacyzne's interests in Working people, shtetl people and poor people. "The photos were sent to the Forverts with the barest of captions," reveals Web, who was born in Poland before the war but does not remember the world shown by Kacyzne. "He wrote very brief captions on the backs of the pictures as if he were telling Americans that these people were their brothers and sisters and should be known to them. all unusual," the archivist says. "They are beautiful, nostalgic and heart-rend- ing when you think that most of the people did not survive the Holocaust. "Kacyzne's connection with people was complete, and he brought them out in such a way that viewers see their external beauty and the internal richness of their souls. They evoke feelings that make viewers understand them as humans whose lives are worth knowing." E. Poyln: Jewish Life in the Old Country will be published Nov. 8 by Metropolitan Books.