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Revealed: Disney characters drawn by Holocaust survivors

The Yad Vashem Holocaust museum is set to display the items, one of the most prominent of which is a colorful jar featuring Pinocchio.

by  Yori Yalon
Published on  07-08-2024 01:30
Last modified: 07-08-2024 16:39
Revealed: Disney characters drawn by Holocaust survivorsYad Vashem

A drawing inspired by "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" | Photo: Yad Vashem

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The Yad Vashem Holocaust museum is set to showcase a collection of Disney-inspired artworks created by Holocaust survivors and victims. These rare pieces, including a Pinocchio-adorned jar buried to escape Nazi persecution and a Mickey Mouse birthday card preserved for over seven decades, offer a unique window into how Jews, especially children, found solace and expression through familiar cartoon characters during one of history's darkest periods.

The collection includes a Mickey Mouse birthday card (Yad Vashem)

For 80 years, these artworks remained hidden, some wrapped, damaged, or concealed, yet they managed to survive the journey from concentration camps and ghettos. Often the sole possessions of Holocaust survivors, they have now found their way into Yad Vashem's collections.

As part of the "relocation" to the new Shaffer collections center, which houses millions of historical artifacts – objects, documents, artworks, and photographs from countless sources – artistic treasures created by Jews during the Holocaust have been uncovered. Most of these were made by children and teenagers who expressed their emotions through works featuring characters familiar to almost everyone – Walt Disney films.

"One of the most touching Disney drawings was created in March 1941, at the height of the war, inspired by the film 'Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs,'" curator Eliad Moreh-Rosenberg, director of Yad Vashem's Art Collection, says. "Henri Kichka, father of Michel Kichka, was then a 15-year-old boy who had lost his family in the gas chambers and found refuge in the magical world of fairy tales. After the war, he returned to Brussels and collected items from the family apartment, including this drawing which he gave to his daughter Hanna, who immigrated to Israel in 1970. Hanna passed the drawing to her son Yaron, who received a dedication from his grandfather – 'To Yaron, from his grandpa.'"

Drawing to survive

The collection includes a jar adorned with the image of Pinocchio (Yad Vashem)

Kichka was not the only one who found comfort in Disney films. Suzanne Schick was 14 when she fled Austria at the outbreak of World War II and hid in Yugoslavia with about 1,200 Jews awaiting immigration permits to Israel. On her 15th birthday, her friends prepared a gift – a box with a drawing of a ship and a Mickey Mouse greeting, which she kept close to her heart for 72 years as the last memory of her childhood, until she entrusted it to Yad Vashem for future generations.

Another item, one of the most prominent artworks created during the Holocaust using cartoon characters, is a colorful jar featuring Pinocchio. The jar was created before the war by artist Lilly Kasticher from Yugoslavia. "When the war broke out and she was deported with her family to Auschwitz, Lilly buried the jar in the ground along with documents and photographs as a hope to preserve a last memory," explains curator Michael Tal, manager of Yad Vashem's Artifacts Collection. "Lilly encouraged her fellow prisoners to write poems and draw in order to survive, and after the war, she even brought the creations to Israel inside the jar she had buried in the ground."

The collections center, spanning 63,300 square feet, includes four underground floors and an additional floor housing five of the world's most advanced laboratories for preserving paper, photographs, artifacts, textiles, and art. The center will preserve about 227 million pages of documentation, tens of thousands of artifacts and artworks, and hundreds of thousands of photographs and testimonies from Holocaust survivors.

Tags: DisneyHolocaust survivorWorld War IIYad Vashem

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