For years I thought that the famous tree-hanging photo from Buchenwald was a fake. That is, a propaganda photo (or a montage) that was specifically made in order to deceive.
I based this on an article by Wolfgang Ayaß and Dietfrid Krause-Vilmar "Mit Argumenten gegen die Holocaust-Leugnung" in Polis №19, the relevant part of which was based on Herbert Obenaus, "Das Foto vom Baumhängen - ein Bild geht um die Welt", in Gedenkstätten-Rundbrief, №68.
According to these authors the photo was staged by DEFA. But as someone has pointed out, there is now a newer piece of research that establishes the actual origin of the photo. It's Holm Kirsten, "Das Fotoarchiv der Gedenkstätte Buchenwald", Archive in Thüringen, Tagungsband 2010, S.22ff. Kirsten writes that it has recently become possible to find out the name of the photographer - it was the former inmate Willem Hoogwerf from the Netherlands who made the photos with a camera that was a present from an American solider. This and a couple of other similar photos were made between 15 and 26 April 1945. The original description of the photo was found:
Some will say: well, what's the difference? The difference is intent.
Obviously, deniers have been using it as an example of Allied fakery - and I can't blame them - but if they want to be honest, they should stop doing it now.
Oh, who am I kidding.
I based this on an article by Wolfgang Ayaß and Dietfrid Krause-Vilmar "Mit Argumenten gegen die Holocaust-Leugnung" in Polis №19, the relevant part of which was based on Herbert Obenaus, "Das Foto vom Baumhängen - ein Bild geht um die Welt", in Gedenkstätten-Rundbrief, №68.
According to these authors the photo was staged by DEFA. But as someone has pointed out, there is now a newer piece of research that establishes the actual origin of the photo. It's Holm Kirsten, "Das Fotoarchiv der Gedenkstätte Buchenwald", Archive in Thüringen, Tagungsband 2010, S.22ff. Kirsten writes that it has recently become possible to find out the name of the photographer - it was the former inmate Willem Hoogwerf from the Netherlands who made the photos with a camera that was a present from an American solider. This and a couple of other similar photos were made between 15 and 26 April 1945. The original description of the photo was found:
Reconstruction of one of the "light punishments". The SS man was forced by the Americans to cooperate. Later the SS personnel were shot, exactly like in Dachau, Neuengamme, etc.The photo thus was not intended to deceive and was clearly marked as a reconstruction (which represented something that actually had happened). That later propagandists misused it, ignoring the original intent, does not make the original photo a fake, nor does the fact that it does not depict an authentic scene - it's no more fake than Schindler's List or Katyń.
Some will say: well, what's the difference? The difference is intent.
Obviously, deniers have been using it as an example of Allied fakery - and I can't blame them - but if they want to be honest, they should stop doing it now.
Oh, who am I kidding.
This is always my concern, finding photographs like this on the Internet.
ReplyDeleteThe original intent was worthwhile, depicting the torture the inmates went through. The "hanging punishment" is well established. The problem is someone trying to pass this off as genuine but getting fooled by a depiction.
Yeah. The problem is that some people don't seem to care. They'll just google or bing for images and take whatever first results they get, like e.g. this guy who included a fake photo because apparently he thought that you can trust anything on the internet...
ReplyDeletehttp://www.dailykos.com/story/2016/3/8/1497919/-STOP-THE-DAMNED-NAZI-REFERENCES
I only rely on photographs from sources I can trust. This blog, Yad Vashem, USHMM, though I understand even they've had problems.
DeleteGhetto Fighter has a good photo archive and is pretty trustworthy.
DeleteI forgot about them, you are right.
DeleteAt YV one can sometimes find very serious mistakes in photo descriptions. But yeah, it is safer to use sites of scholarly institutions.
ReplyDeleteYV some times corrects their images... They recently had an update so I don't know if the misidentification problem still exists.
ReplyDeleteThis is not a “re-enactment.” One of the men being tortured is Otto Feuer. Look him up.
ReplyDeleteDear Unknown, it may as well be someone named Otto Feuer on the photo but how does that prove that it's not a reenactment? I've cited a scholarly source. Simply saying "no" in response is not an argument.
ReplyDelete