Outrage Over Offensive Art at Polish Museum

WARSAW, Poland (AP/Hamodia) —
The Museum of Contemporary Art in Krakow. (Mocak)
The Museum of Contemporary Art in Krakow. (Mocak)

Jewish officials were voicing outrage over a video installation at a Polish museum that shows men and women playing a game of tag in a gas chamber.

Efraim Zuroff, director of the Simon Wiesenthal Center’s office in Yerushalayim, called the installation at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Krakow “so offensive and so disgusting that we found it necessary to protest.”

“Game of Tag,” made in 1999 by Polish artist Artur Zmijewski, has for years been accused of desecrating the memory of the Six Million.

It was displayed among the works of more than 20 artists at a temporary exhibition on the Holocaust running from May 15 through Oct. 31. Zmiejewski’s video has been shown at museums in Germany and Estonia, where it has also caused protests.

The World Jewish Congress and Yad Vashem, Israel’s Holocaust memorial, have also asked the museum to remove the installation.

In response, the museum recently put it behind an enclosure with a warning.

But Zuroff and other Jewish officials say it isn’t enough. Zuroff said it is “simply incomprehensible” that the video is being shown in Poland, where Nazis killed millions of Jews and non-Jews.

Jonathan Ornstein, the executive director of the Jewish Community Center of Krakow, a city with a once-vibrant Jewish community nearly wiped out in the Holocaust, said survivor groups from around the world have contacted him recently to tell him how upset they are.

“They feel that it shows a lack of respect for the victims, that it is not necessary and that it takes the Holocaust lightly,” Ornstein said.

The museum’s director, Anna Maria Potocka, said in a statement on Tuesday that her museum means no disrespect to the memory of the Holocaust, saying “we have tried to awaken [the] young generation’s empathy with the tragedy of the Holocaust by stirring their imagination.”

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