Prologue
Map of Polish Galicia
Introduction
1 Jewish Life in Ruins
2 Jewish Culture as It Once Was
3 The Holocaust: Sites of Massacre and Destruction
4 How the Past is Being Remembered
5 People Making Memory Today
Epilogue
A Notes on Galicia, Place Names, and Sources
Background Notes
Bibliography
Index
Jonathan Webber is a British social anthropologist. He taught Jewish studies at the universities of Oxford and Birmingham before taking up a professorship at the Jagiellonian University in Kraków. He retired in 2016. He currently serves on the board of the Galicia Jewish Museum and is founding chair of the European Association for Holocaust Studies. Chris Schwarz was a much-travelled British photojournalist who in Poland teamed up with Jonathan Webber to work on the Traces of Memory project and in 2004 opened the Galicia Jewish Museum in Kraków to showcase his photographs as a way of bringing the story of the Jewish heritage in Polish Galicia to Poland and to the world. He died in 2007.
Reviews
'Polish-Jewish relations have long suffered from stereotypes and
false accusations on both sides, and this book is a major step in
the attempt to right the wrongs of the past ... A courageous and
honest work, imbued with spirituality and feeling for the places
and the subject, rarely matched.'
- Michael Schudrich, Chief Rabbi of Poland
'Chris Schwarz and Jonathan Webber have poignantly captured the
ruins of memory. Tradition, religion, culture, language,
architecture, homes, places of worship, and cemeteries, all
beautifully photographed, clearly explained. Their work is a
fitting memorial to the Jews of Galicia, who survive only through
these whispered traces.'
- Stephen Smith, Chair, Holocaust Memorial Day Trust, UK
'Galicia was home to a vibrant Jewish society, which over many
generations shaped the scope and direction of Jewish culture and
added to its intensity. Hasidism, the enlightenment of the
Haskalah, and Zionism were all movements that took root in Galicia
and grew in ways that changed the course of Jewish history and
energized Jewish society. This exceptional book conveys the
physical and the metaphysical world of Galician Jewry, both at its
peak and in its destruction by the Germans ... Chris Schwarz's
photos draw the eye and stir the heart; Jonathan Webber's texts are
informative, moving, and written with much wisdom. Altogether, it
took a rare combination of brain, of heart, and of an intelligent
and penetrating eye to produce a book that adds new layers to
memory and inspires a yearning for what was lost. It will be a
source of pride for every Jew-whether or not they have Galician
roots.'
- Shevach Weiss, former Israeli Ambassador to Poland
'A remarkable tribute to the Jewish heritage of Polish Galicia ...
immortalized in this exquisite photographic record and erudite
commentary. A treasure for future generations.'
- Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, New York University and Museum of
the History of Polish Jews
'Poignant and beautiful ... a panoramic picture not only of what is
left of Jewish life in Poland but of what it was like in its heyday
in all its aspects, both good and bad. It documents where and how
it was destroyed and gives a moving account of what is being done
to preserve the memory of what was lost and of the people, both
Poles and Jews, involved in this important undertaking.'
- Antony Polonsky, Editor-in-Chief of Polin: Studies in Polish
Jewry
'Jonathan Webber has a depth of knowledge about Jewish culture and
the Jewish experience in Polish Galicia that few can equal. His
captions to Chris Schwarz's stunning photos are deliberately brief,
allowing the pictures to 'speak'on their own, but his wonderfully
detailed-and highly readable-notes in the back section of the book
evoke a rich texture of memory and tradition and loss and even
hope.'
- Ruth Ellen Gruber, author of National Geographic Jewish Heritage
Travel: A Guide to Eastern Europe
'Travelling with Jonathan Webber in Galicia was one of the most
moving experiences of my life. Now every reader can participate in
that journey through this extraordinary book, revisiting a past
that has tragically vanished but continues to move and
inspire.'
- Rabbi Shmuley Boteach, host of TLC's Shalom in the Home and
founder of This World: The Values Network
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