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the Arms of Strangers: Stories of the Kindertransport
Lost Children of Berlin (1997) Starring: Lost Children of Berlin, Anthony Hopkins, et al. • NTSC format (US and Canada only) • Color, Black & White, NTSC • The Last Days (1998) Director: James Moll • NTSC format (US and Canada only) • Color, Closed-captioned, Dolby, NTSC The Hiding Place Starring: James F. Collier, et al. Director: James F. Collier • NTSC format (US and Canada only) • Color, NTSC • Posledni Motyl (1991) Director: Karel Kachyna • NTSC format (US and Canada only) • Color, NTSC Survivors Life is Beautiful (1998) Starring: Roberto Benigni, Nicoletta Braschi, et al. Director: Roberto Benigni • Region 1 encoding (US and Canada only) • Color, Closed-captioned, Widescreen, Dolby • Theatrical trailer(s) • Making Life Beautiful Featurette • Academy Award TV Commercials • Widescreen letterbox format. Schindler's List (1993) (Widescreen Edition) Starring: Liam Neeson, Ralph Fiennes, et al. Director: Steven Spielberg • NTSC format (US and Canada only) • Black & White, Widescreen, Closed-captioned - Other Formats: VHS The Diary of Anne Frank (1959) Starring: Millie Perkins, Shelley Winters, et al. • NTSC format (US and Canada only) • Black & White, Closed-captioned, NTSC |
The investigation took the crew on the train to Poland, where Julian tracked down Wiktor's nephew, as well as a woman who had served with him in the Underground. An interview with the former Communist director of a museum where Wiktor's works had reportedly been shown produced only a bewildering string of denials -- raising new questions about what happened to the countless paintings, sketches, photographs and other works Wiktor created. More tantalizing clues turned up as to the whereabouts of Wiktor's "lost manuscript," and how he was ostracized by his family, friends and the country he had fought and suffered for. In an interview with Wiktor's nephew, a harsh and tragic portrait began to emerge of Wiktor's last days. In response to a question posed to the nephew about why Wiktor's daughter and immediate family would have been "ashamed" of him, Julian learned the tragic wartime pressures that tore Wiktor's family apart, and turned father against daughter. In a hushed and pained voice, Wiktor's nephew explained that the daughter, though Polish, had been educated and raised in the heavily German enforced culture of their small border city, and had fallen in love with a German officer. By the time Wiktor returned from Sachsenhausen, his town and his family was for all intents and purposes German. To the German citizens of the town -- who had literally dictated the fate of families like his -- Wiktor was a pariah. Wiktor's daughter, so strongly influenced by her German surroundings and social structure, had to make the painful choice of being with the man she loved or giving him up out of respect for her father. It became clear to Julian that Wiktor's daughter was also a victim of a tragic situation; in the twisted context of postwar Poland, his family's "shame" became easier to understand. Wiktor's nephew went on to explain that, because of Wiktor's allegiance to a free Poland in what had become a Communist state after the war, he was branded "persona non grata" and lived out the rest of his days virtually penniless and alone. His patriotic art and anti-establishment attitudes ensured that he never achieved the social standing that he deserved. Much of his art "disappeared," possibly confiscated and carted off to Moscow. His manuscript was ignored. He was shunned by former friends and neighbors, with the possible exception of a comrade from the Camps, who may have been his only companion at the end. Wiktor had led a truly heroic life, but the grief and betrayal he must have felt after a lifetime of defending his homeland against the Germans and suffering five years in a concentration camp under the Nazis was probably too much for him to bear. There were hints that he suffered a stroke, and possibly committed suicide. There were reports that Wiktor most likely was buried in a remote mountain monastery for indigent men in an unmarked grave. Such clues -- and the tantalizing mystery of the missing manuscript -- demanded to be addressed. The details of Wiktor's final days were almost within reach. But just as the production team was close to solving the mysteries of Wiktor's life, their small budget ran out. Julian and his crew returned to Berlin, said their good-byes, and he returned to Los Angeles. Encouraged by what they had managed to uncover in two short weeks, they all expected to be back on the trail again in a few months. Back in the States, Julian went to work to raise the necessary funds to continue the quest. The brief trip had unfurled a long list of unfinished tasks: to finally see Wiktor's manuscript rescued from its obscurity, translated and published; to uncover the truth of what happened to so much of Wiktor's "lost" art; to track down the people who knew Wiktor and could fill in the gaps in the story of his courageous struggle, his survival and his final days; to pay for a proper memorial at Wiktor's grave; and to complete the film that will document it all. That was in August of 2000. Since then, funding for the project has proven stubbornly elusive. The film - just like Wiktor's writings and artwork - remains unfinished - just as his tormentors would have wished. To date, Julian and his crew have recorded more than 20 hours of footage in Germany and in Poland, including interviews with family members, museum directors, and Holocaust experts. With dwindling personal funds and small donations, they have continued to pursue the project from Los Angeles. Most recently, they interviewed Freddy Diament, a Jewish survivor who was in Sachsenhausen at the same time as Wiktor. A screening of a short demonstration tape was held in August 2002 before an enthusiastic Los Angeles audience. But little substantial work can take place until major completion funds are secured. The plan is to return to Poland, the Czech Republic and Germany to continue their interviews with the people who knew Wiktor, to document the details revealed in his manuscript, and to film in Washington D.C. at the US Memorial Holocaust Museum, where much of Wiktor's artwork and writings are stored. They will also be interviewing the noted Trauma Psychologist Dr. Yael Danieli, as well as Art Historian Carol Zemel. Julian has won the cooperation of officials at the US Memorial Holocaust Museum, who recently sent him hundreds of pages of documents, photos and copies of Wiktor's art. As part of their Congressional mandate to honor all victims of the Holocaust, the USHMM staff has been particularly intrigued by Wiktor's story. The USHMM, together with officials at Sachsenhausen, have agreed to work with Julian to complete the project he started more than two years ago. The project is continuing to seek the funding needed to produce the documentary. To date, the film has received financial or in-kind support from The Arch and Bruce Brown Foundation, G.O. Wilson, Jr., Carole Weiss, Jon Rosbrook, Jehan Agrama and Dwora Fried, Nancy Nickerson, Martha Elliot, and in-kind contributions from Media 100, Inc., and the Warsaw and Prague Sheraton Hotels. A short demonstration tape is available to anyone interested in seeing a sample of the footage. Donations to the project are fully tax deductible through the non-profit sponsorship of the Film Arts Foundation of San Francisco; online contributions may be made at the FAF website, www.filmarts.org, or contact Adriana Rosas-Walsh at 415/552-8760x301. (See Donor Information below). Julian feels strongly that the film - while focused on events that occurred more than half a century ago - is extremely relevant today. The core of the project deals with what Julian calls "the untouched inner territory of the victim. What is most provocative to me about this project," he says, "is that it deals with what a person does to survive, to hold on to Self, in the face of brutality and inhumanity. It is a timeless message, which speaks to anyone who has experienced racism, bigotry or been the victim of hate crimes - an unfortunately huge and growing audience today "Wiktor provides a model for countless victims of terror, intolerance and hate," Julian continues. "Here's a man who had survived by connecting to his creative self. He used his artistic gifts to exorcise the pain and terror and humiliation he experienced under the Nazis and miraculously managed to hold on to his soul. That is what victims needs to know. Not simply that they are victims, but that there is a way to beat those demons, to conquer the terror, and survive. Wiktor's story shows all of us that there is life beyond these traumatic experiences. We can never forget the trauma life puts upon us, but we can learn to put them in a place so that we can have a normal life again." In his recent interview for the film, Wiktor's fellow Sachsenhausen Survivor, Freddy Diament, tells Julian: "Elie Wiesel said, 'For the dead, and for the living, you have to bear witness.' There are survivors, like Wiktor, who felt if he was fortunate enough to survive, he has a moral obligation to tell the world what happened, and what will happen, when organized hatred takes over. In order to make the world a better place, it is imperative: you MUST tell the truth." That
was Wiktor's mission in life, and it is not completed. It is now the
mission of "Wiktor: The Art of Survival." Julian is determined to never
abandon Wiktor and the film, no matter how long it takes. "It's vital,"
he says, "that the words 'Never Again,' really mean never again for all
of us." |