Faye Schulman

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Faye Schulman (born 1919) was a Jewish partisan photographer, and the only such photographer to photograph their struggle in Eastern Europe during the Second World War.[1] She was born in the Eastern Poland (since 1939 - Belarus), and after the Nazis 1941 invaded Belarus her family was imprisoned in a ghetto and most of the people in the ghetto were killed, but she was spared because of her photographic skills.[2] She was recruited to work as a photographer for the Nazis.[3] She took a photograph which she saw depicted her family dead in a mass grave, and this convinced her to join the resistance.[3] She joined a group which was composed mostly of prisoners of war who had escaped from the German captivity, and worked for them as a nurse from September 1942 to July 1944.[4] She also took photographs after getting her photographic equipment back in a raid.[4] After her time in the resistance she married Morris Schulman, and they stayed in the Landsberg displaced persons camps in Germany, where they helped to smuggle weapons to support Israeli independence.[2] In 1948 they went to Canada.[2][4] Faye Schulman has been decorated by the Soviet/Belorussian, American and Canadian governments.

She wrote A Partisan’s Memoir: Woman of the Holocaust (1995).[3]

References

  1. ^ "Exhibit 2013.02.27: Pictures of Resistance: The Wartime Photographs of Jewish Partisan Faye Schulman". ojmche.org.
  2. ^ a b c "PBS.org - Daring to Resist: Faye Schulman - Cont'd". pbs.org.
  3. ^ a b c stacey palevsky. "Rare photos show hidden life of partisans who fought Nazis". jweekly.com.
  4. ^ a b c "Mini Bio: Faye Schulman". jewishpartisans.org.