Opening reception of a new exhibition at the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library.
Marking the forty-fifth anniversary of the initial videotaping by the Holocaust Survivors Film Project—a grassroots New Haven community initiative that evolved into the Fortunoff Video Archive for Holocaust Testimonies—In the First Person is the first large-scale public exhibition of footage from this groundbreaking collection. Powerful excerpts from nineteen video testimonies presents the experiences of survivors and witnesses to the atrocities and genocide committed by Nazi Germany and its collaborators.
These videos are presented alongside a display of books, pamphlets, manuscripts, documents, and other items from the collections of Yale Library that presents a history of Jewish efforts to document anti-Jewish persecution by means of eyewitness accounts, from the Kishinev Pogrom of 1903 through the Holocaust and its aftermath. The exhibition confronts the myth that survivors were silent about their experiences in the immediate post–World War II period and provides further context for understanding the Fortunoff Archive’s historical significance and impact.
Taken together, these materials reveal longstanding Jewish practices of documentation following periods of destruction and violence. While the Fortunoff Archive has been pathbreaking in harnessing the potential of video technology, it also participates in a Jewish tradition that extends as far back as the Biblical commandment to remember the past.