231 58 9MB
English Pages [171] Year 1990
AVID KAHAN TRANSLATED JERZY MICHALOWICZ i
BY
An Alternate Selection of the Jewish Book Club "A Holocaust memoir made exceptional by the diarist's rare combination of thoroughness for detail with an eye for
irony."-Kirkus Reviews "Kahane has written a felicitous blend of personal recollection and keen observation.
"-Booklist Originally published in Hebrew, this powerful memoir bears witness to the systematic destruction of some 135,000 Jews in the Ukrainian city of Lvov during the Holocaust. The author, a rabbi; escaped death because he was hidden by the Ukrainian archbishop of the Uniate Catholic Church. His wife and young daughter were also given refuge, separately in Catholic convents. The memoir covers the period from July 1, 1941, when the Germans occupied Lvov, to July 27, 1944, when the city was liberate d. In the first part of the book, the author is living in the Jewish ghetto under increasingly dire circumstances; in the second part, he is imprisoned in a forced labor camp; and in the third part, following his escape, he is in hiding under the protection of Metropolitan Sheptytskyi. Kahane tells his story with great sensitivity and raises many important moral questions. He documents not only the unforgivable behavior of the Nazis and of many Ukrainians, but also the humane efforts of some Ukrainians, particularly those in the Church, to shelter Jews from harm. "Does this memoir add significantly to •
I
the stock of our knowledge? I would ._up�esitijtingly, mjsver the question in the
affirmative. The Lvov Ghetto Diary contains numerous vignettes and details not to be found elsewhere. Its descriptions of the temper and behavior of Nazi executioners are especially valuable; they provide fresh material for the most important and unending scholarly task of understanding the social psychology of the murderers and torturers of Euro pean Jewry....Kahane's account of his hiding, his discussion of Ukrainian Jewish relations, his conversations with Sheptytskyi, his sketches of the priests, monks, and nuns, of their humanity and their cool and efficient manner in the face of mortal danger to themselves during German searches for hidden Jews, all form an important addition to the theme of the 'Righteous Gentiles' in the literature of the Holocaust....Historians will read this book with profit. Lay readers are likely to find it irresistibly engaging." -Erich Goldhagen, Harvard University (from the preface) David Kahane was for many years chief rabbi in the Israeli Air Force. He lives in Tel Aviv. Jacket photograph reproduced with permission of the archive of the Ghetto Fighters' House Jacket design by Ann Lowe
The University of Massachusetts Press Amherst 01004
DAVID
KAHANE
Lvov Ghetto Diary
Translated by Jerzy Michalowicz
Foreword by Erich Goldhagen
The
University of Massachusetts Press
Amherst
Copyright
Foreword
The
© 1990 by © 1990 by
David Kahane
University of Massachusetts Press
All rights reserved
Printed in the United States of America Originally published in Hebrew, in Israel, by Yad
Vashem
Lc 90- 1 1 042 ISBN
0-87023-726-8
Designed by Edith Kearney Set in Linotron
Granjon by Keystone Typesetting,
Inc.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Kahana, David, 1903-
[Yoman geto Levov. English] Lvov ghetto diary
/
David Kahane
;
translated by Jerzy Michalowicz;
foreword by Erich Goldhagen.
cm.
p.
Translation ISBN
of:
Yoman
0-87023-726-8
geto Levov.
(alk.
paper)
— Ukraine — L'vov — — Ukraine — L'vov — Rabbis — Ukraine — L'vov — Biography. 1903— (Ukraine) — Ethnic I.
Jews
Persecutions.
.
4.
relations.
DS135.R93L89513 947'. 718
2.
Holocaust, Jewish
Personal narratives.
(1939-1945)
I.
3. 5.
Kahana, David, L'vov
Title.
1990
— dc20
90-11042 CIP
British Library Cataloguing in Publication data are available.
^
CONTENTS
Foreword by Erich Goldhagen Preface
ix
The Beginning 1
mi
The Ghetto
j
The Occupation and Community 5
Period
of the Lvov
The First Days The Judenrat and
Its
Forced Labor
27
5
Departments
The Estabhshment of the Lvov Ghetto The March Action ^9 From Af(tion to Action 48 The Great Action of August 1942: The the
Lvov Ghetto
The Janowski Camp
7^
8^
Getting Acquainted with the Janowski Daily Routine in the Janowski
Camp
/09
Strangers
118
People in the
3
Among Hiding
Camp
Camp
725
in the Metropolitan's Palace
In the Library of the Monastery
Appendixes
75^
8^
g8
in Metropolitan Sheptytskyi's Residence
The Monastery Back
Destruction of
57
In the Barracks and in Hiding
2
Annihilation
i^y /^^
118
^
FOREWORD
Because there have been other accounts of the
fate
of the Jews
in the city
of Lvov and the Janowski camp, the question naturally
Does
memoir add
this
vv^ould unhesitatingly
significantly to the stock of
answer the question
arises,
our know^ledge?
in the affirmative.
I
The Lvov
Ghetto Diary contains numerous vignettes and details not to be found elsewhere.
Its
descriptions of the temper
and behavior of Nazi execu-
tioners are especially valuable; they provide fresh material for the
important and unending scholarly task of understanding the
most social
psychology of the murderers and torturers of European Jewry. But the chief virtue of the
memoir
lies in its
contribution to the historiography
of one of the most bitterly disputed aspects of the Holocaust, namely, the attitude of Ukrainians to Jews during that period. It is
an axiom
among Jews, and
especially
among Jewish
survivors of
the Holocaust, that the vast majority of the Ukrainians, particularly in Galicia,
many
watched the extermination of the Jews with approval and that
actively aided the
Nazis
in their slaughter.
This collective con-
demnation of the Ukrainian people (vehemently rejected by most Ukrainians) acknowledges that there were exceptions
Ukrainians were
filled
—
a minority of
with compassion for the Jews and a minuscule
number were Good Samaritans aiding and rescuing Jews at the risk of their own lives. The most eminent figure in that minority was Metropolitan Sheptytskyi, the head of the Ukrainian church. Grieving at the
slaughter of the Jews and distressed that
he issued a pastoral
participated in
it,
(reproduced in
this
letter to
Himmler
members of his own people "Thou shalt not murder"
letter
book) and took the audacious step of addressing a
protesting the extermination.
figure of equal rank in the
the fate of the Jews
No other
ecclesiastical
whole of Europe displayed such sorrow
and acted
so boldly
on
for
their behalf. Sheptytskyi also
saved the lives of Jews by hiding them in monasteries under his control.
vti
and one of those thus saved was the author of
this
memoir. Kahane's
account of his hiding, his discussion of Ukrainian- Jewish relations, his conversations with Sheptytskyi, his sketches of the priests, monks, and
nuns, of their humanity and their cool and efficient
of mortal danger to themselves during Jews,
form an important addition
all
German
to the
manner
in the face
searches for hidden
theme of the "Righteous
Gentiles" in the literature on the Holocaust.
Even to find
historians will read this
it
irresistibly
book with
profit.
Lay readers
are likely
engaging.
Erich Goldhagen Lecturer on Jewish Studies
Harvard University January 1990
Vltl
PREFACE