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I Noticed That Some People Don’t Know Much About The Holocaust, So I Colorized These Photos (10 Pics)
I was recently shocked to read these words in The New York Times: "For seven decades, 'never forget' has been a rallying cry of the Holocaust remembrance movement."
But a survey released Thursday, on Holocaust Remembrance Day, found that many adults lack basic knowledge of what happened; and this lack of knowledge is more pronounced among millennials, whom the survey defined as people ages 18 to 34.
Thirty-one percent of Americans and 41 percent of millennials believe that two million or fewer Jews were killed in the Holocaust; the actual number is around six million. Forty-one percent of Americans and 66 percent of millennials cannot say what Auschwitz was. And 52 percent of Americans wrongly think Hitler came to power through force.
I first started working on this historical photo project several years ago, using contemporary reference images to colorize and restore pictures from the Holocaust. I did publish the colored pictures on my Facebook and my blog, but now I realize that that wasn't nearly enough so I worked on the picture restoration a bit more, and I'm publishing them again here. It seems to me that black and white pictures colorized will help people to better empathize with the victims of the Holocaust and I hope that any artist that is interested in working with me to make more color pictures or even to improve the ones that I've colorized so far would please contact me. I am also interested in being contacted by anyone who could help me with this history picture project in general. This project is not for profit, but feel free to follow me on my Facebook, Instagram, Patreon or YouTube or check out my webpage.
More info: joachimwest.com | Instagram | patreon.com | youtube.com
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Wedding Bands Found During The Liberation Of Buchenwald Concentration Camp
I was surfing the internet and I came across a webpage that featured photographs of famous people that had been colorized. These were photographs that I had seen a million times, the face of Abraham Lincoln, a photograph of Amelia Earhart standing next to her plane, etc. but when I saw them colorized it was as if I was seeing them for the first time. It was as if they had stepped out of a foggy world of memories and into reality.
I’m a fine artist who makes work about society and I come from a Jewish/Spanish family, so I grew up hearing stories of the hardships that my family went through because of fascism and hate. Because it has touched my life directly, it’s easy for me to sympathize with the victims of the Holocaust and to realize that we have lost so much because of it but it’s obvious to me that not everyone feels the same way.
I thought to myself, “I should make a body of colorized photographs of the holocaust that Holocaust museums could exhibit and that people who educate about the Holocaust could use to help their students to sympathize with the victims. Someone must have done this already, though…” but I went about searching the internet to see if I could find it. I couldn’t find it. It didn’t exist.
I decided to go ahead and make some colorized images of the Holocaust so that I could propose the idea of exhibitions to Holocaust museums who I thought could get these resources into the hands of Holocaust educators. I have some basic knowledge of Photoshop and plenty of experience as a painter, but I had no idea how to colorize a photograph. I taught myself how to do it and I scoured the internet for photographs of the settings and clothing to make them as accurate to history as possible.
I then wrote emails to various Holocaust educators with my images attached. I received no interest. It honestly depressed me. I gave up on the project.
I moved to Spain, to the village that my mother grew up in. I was fascinated by the graffiti that littered the town and began to make artwork about that instead. There was a sort of political war between neo-Nazis and young communists that largely seemed focused on issues of immigration that were playing out and evolving on the walls of the town. While it isn’t hard to find the same sort of hatred that inspired the Holocaust on the internet, swastikas littered the town where I lived. Why don’t these young people learn from the past? I was thinking about the issue every day.
I read an article in the New York Times on Holocaust Remembrance Day that published statistics about the shocking amount of ignorance about the Holocaust among millennials and it reminded me of the colorized photographs that I had made. Yes, they had been rejected by the Holocaust museums, but it wasn’t a bad idea, maybe they just needed a different venue. I thought of Bored Panda. I’ve posted my work here before and nothing clicked but I decided to give it a try anyway.
The results were staggering. Absolutely incredible. So many people have seen these colorized photographs and while I am still very scared for humanity, it gives me hope.It is very important that the world never forgets the Holocaust because it is such a poignant lesson of the horrors and loss that come from ignorance and hatred.
Colorized Photograph Of Anne Frank
Honestly, I love learning about the Holocaust. Ot is just an interesting topic for me, as I come from German decent. I don't think anyone should forget about it, and I think the people who say it didn't happen need to hit reality.
I learned about colorizing photographs for the express purpose of doing this project and I’m sure that there are many people who are better at it than I am but the way that I do it is to make a black and white layer on the bottom in Photoshop and a black and white layer on top and I paint in the color in the middle, a lot like one would paint a painting. It’s like a color sandwich.
Historical accuracy is extremely important to me because there are people who believe that the Holocaust never happened. There is always the threat that someone might say “this is fake” but I think that these colorized photographs are even more true to reality than the black and white photos that were taken at the scene because we don’t see the world in black and white. We see the world in color.
I was very careful to gather and look at as many source images as I could and because the concentration camps still exist and because many of the uniforms and patches still exist, I could sample the colors directly from contemporary reference photographs.
Colorized Photo Of A Catholic Girl. Czesława Kwoka, 1942-43
I read the story of this girl, I can't remember her name but she was very young, around 12 years old I think. The dark colour marks on her lips are blood; she was beaten by a female officer before the photo was taken because she was crying. It's so very heartbreaking.
I’ve always loved art and I’ve always been drawn to it. My family saw that I had a talent and love for it from an early age and always supported me in it. Maybe it’s because I’m the kind of person who is deeply affected emotionally by the things that are around me? Colors affect my mood, for example. If my environment is a mess, I feel a certain way. If a room is clean, I feel differently. I can be deeply moved by a painting or a sculpture.
I did various private classes as a child and many days I would come home after school and lock myself away and make sculptures or draw and paint. I then did an undergraduate degree in Fine Art at the University of Texas at Dallas and then moved to Spain to do a Master's Degree in Fine Art.
The only reason that I learned to colorize photographs was to do this project, but I have honestly used the same technique to colorize a lot of things since then in Photoshop for my own personal amusement.
Colorized Photograph From Auschwitz Concentration Camp
Learning about history informs our image of ourselves. It helps us to understand who we are and where we come from. It shows us that we are capable of great things and terrible things. It gives us courage and inspiration to do tremendous and difficult things and gives us lessons to avoid certain things. History should help us to build a roadmap in our minds of where we would like to go, not only as individuals but as societies. It teaches us that we are most successful when we have empathy for each other and work together to make the world a better place for all of us.
Colorized Photo From The Daschau Concentration Camp
I’m Jewish and the Holocaust has a personal significance. It’s not unusual for me to be randomly surfing the internet and find anti-Semitic comments about the Jews or to even hear or see reminders that people hate the Jews in my daily life. The same prejudices that existed then still exist today and I live with the fact that there are plenty of people who would be happy for me to be killed or to kill me simply because of my genetic makeup.
Yet the Holocaust isn’t only significant for me. The Nazis didn’t only kill Jews. They killed people with disabilities, people who were LGBTQ, and people who thought differently about the world. The Holocaust is also a tremendous example of the disasters and horrors that come about when those kinds of people are put into positions of power and the importance of empathy for other human beings. It was disastrous not only for the people who the Nazis persecuted but for all of Germany as Germany was left in shambles following the Second World War.
I’m very concerned that we haven’t learned the lessons of the Holocaust. Concentration camps still exist today. Genocide still happens. Anti-Semitism is still prevalent and violent and maniacal people are still being put into positions of power, people who hate other people simply because they are different. I’m afraid that authoritarianism is still extremely prevalent, and I worry for humanity, that people are quick to give up their personal freedom to corruptible and abusive people and slow to work together to take care of the people who need help and slow to fight against abusive people for the sake of their victims.
Poland, 1939-40
She has such a beautiful face. Seeing something like this makes it seem like not so long ago.
I didn’t do this project for money. I haven’t made a dime from it. I did it because I want people to be able to sympathize with the victims of the Holocaust because only when people care about those who are persecuted can we work to help them and thereby make the world a better place.
We need people to care for other people. People need to know that they should care for each other and why. It’s an issue of education and I see this project as an educational tool.
I am largely inspired by my fear of what is happening around us in the world and what can happen to us if we don’t fight against our baser instincts to kill each other over stupid things. I am also concerned about our inaction against tyranny when we don’t stand up to fight against truly terrible things that are happening in our world. Ignorance is an extremely dangerous thing and I want it to go away, whether it is in me or in the world.
Poland, 1939-40
I think that if you can attend a class and learn how to use programs that will let you colorize things like Photoshop, that’s really the best way to go about it. If you don’t have the money, you might consider asking the professor of the class if you can audit the class. If you are autodidactic, then there really is a ton of information on the internet about how to use these programs and lots of great videos that will walk you through the steps of learning to use a program that will allow you to colorize a photograph.
Poland, 1939-40
I have a girlfriend who I love very much and who is very supportive of my art. We started our relationship at an art show about six years ago during Halloween. She was dressed as a bunny and I was dressed like a stereotypical artist with a striped shirt and a beret. I was exhibiting my artwork and she had organized an artistic intervention to disrupt the event. We have been inseparable since then.
I have shown my artwork in many different countries and across the United States and have traveled between the United States and Spain many times throughout my life. I look forward to going again.
I’ve always made art and I’ve been hiding away from the world and making artwork since I was young. I often don’t show anyone the things that I make.
I strongly believe that art can change the world, sometimes it even changes it for the worse, but I very much want my art to be a force for good in the world. I don’t think that that necessarily means that art must talk about race or politics or religion or social issues at all. Sometimes just seeing something beautiful can make a person’s day better and that is one way to change the world for the better.
Poland, 1939-40
Bakery trucks bringing them bread in the ghetto. Language on the side is German, though Polish could be similar. I am so sad looking at this, their earnest faces filled with anger and worry, and the little girl in the background inexplicably happy about something.
I don’t think that I’m done with this project and answering these questions has been inspiring. I think that I’m going to go to my local Holocaust museum and see if I can talk to the directors face to face. Perhaps knowing that these colorized images that were rejected by many Holocaust museums have been seen by so many people will be proof that colorized images of the Holocaust can help people to remember, to sympathize, and to learn and understand, and never forget.
Poland, 1939-40
Those statistics shock me. What is even worse is that with time they are only going to get higher. I was at a Holocaust Memorial in Boston recently and was shocked at a teenager who kept saying, "What are all these names for?" The questions he kept throwing out were amazing but then I realized that at least (the very least) he was asking because the memorial was there. Never forget indeed. Lets hope there are enough people in the world who are not apathetic in the future to let it happen.
And still, there are peple in my country, who compare jewish stars to vaccination (aka, that unvaccinated people are like jewish people - marked by society). Absolutely disgusting. But thanks for the photos, they are a reminder of those, who died (including a big part of my family from my mums side)
the added colour somehow makes them more real, more relate-able, sadder, even more soul shatteringly shocking and they were always these things and more. I guess some people might be able to distance themselves from the events because of the aged black and white world it seems to have been (as apposed to the multi-colour world of today), but there's was an experience that should never be forgotten, always remembered and those lost held forever near. (hope that all makes sense)
It's horrible and heartbreaking what happened to the Jewish people during WW2. Sometimes people forget that there were so many others rounded up, too, like the young Catholic girl whose picture is shown. "Undesirables" of many origins were killed, starting with people with mental illness, the physically infirm, anyone who was not a good picture of what Germany should be. Political prisoners, protesters, the Romany people (my spelling is likely off there), homosexuals, the list is far too long.
Please remember that in the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration/death camp complex not only Jewish people were killed - there were many Polish, Romanian, Russians and other nationalities. I've visited it once and I am not sure I will ever find a courage to re-visit this place. If you have a chance to visit Poland - please go there. And keep in mind that although it was created on Polish ground it was purely of Nazi German origin. We, Polish people, were victims, not co-creators of this crime against mankind. Right now we need to keep reminding of what hate, false accusations and fake-news can lead to. Hitler indeed won elections at some point...
Very moving... How can humans be so cruel to one another? I cannot fathom. Thanks for posting this stark reminder.
My hometown was tormented during WW2. Every 17th of May we place down flower on out memorial for the victims which faces the fjords as not everyone came home.
DON'T READ IF YOU HAVE A WEAK STOMACH I'm from Europe and we learn a lot about WWII in school. Also I've always had an interest, so I read a lot. Concentration camps were that bad and even worse. Nazi's did experiments on people, they poisoned them, electrocuted them, beaten and cut them, performed operations without anasthesia. They invited young mothers to fancy dinners and afterwards let them know they had eaten their own babies. And so many more unspeakable things. Yes people were THAT emaciated. Parents and children were seperated, husbands and wives were seperated. Twins and triplets were experimented on and had to live in constant pain for years and years. No food, no safety for anyone except blond haired, blue eyed "aryan" germans. No clothes or shoes, heads were shaven (not in a nice way, if your scalp bled they didn't care). So many people were dehumanized. It was as awful and horrible as you can imagine and then some
During my nursing career, I was very skilled at starting very difficult IVs. I would get calls from all over the hospital. One evening I got a call to another unit for a gentleman they couldn't get one in. They said they had already tried SIX times in his left arm. Well that pissed me off because of the pain caused & maybe wasted a vein I could've got. I went in. Did my usual thing. He was in his 90's. I only looked at his right arm. I found one, tried. $h!+! I missed I apologized profusely & tried a 2nd time. Success! I apologized for all the tries by others & the pain it caused. His grandson looked at me & said "It's OK. He's tough. He survived Auschwitz". For me, time stopped. What do you say? There aren't the words in any language. Anyway, after I was finished I went out in the hallway & cried. I had just caused him pain. He should NEVER have had ANY PAIN again EVER. Not after Auschwitz.
Some of the comments here show just how selfish and self-centered people have become.
Always breaks my heart when I see these photos. But I personally like the black and white better then the colorized version. The black and white have more emotion in them. Gives a more realistic view of the situation in my opinion. So sad.
I am german, and we also lost family members during that time (my grandma's sister was disabled. They took her).. i have to say, i am tired of this "attention". We will never forget. You have no idea. We grow up, the first thing being tought at school, is our history in detail. I think there are too many countries in the world, that did (and currently do) just as horrible things to their own people, as it happened in my country. With the huge difference- that nobody seems to care that much for any other issued country, that isn't rich west. Did you know, what happened in cambodia? They killed half of their own population. And the world looked away, didn't give a s**t. Let's not even start about china, or ahm almost every african state.
It think the color added to these photos bring with them a clearer perspective and deeper emotions from within. With every picture, my heart broke even more. Thanks for sharing and for the reminder. Keep the lives lost forever in your heart.
My sister & I went to the Auschwitz exhibit at the Union Station in Kansas City this past summer. It was heart rending, and I cried more than once while walking through it. And it's sad that KC is only one of two places that this exhibit is going to be - it needs to be displayed in every large city in the U.S. People around the world need to know the truth about the Holocaust.
I find it a tragedy and shameful that these photos had to be colorized for people to pay attention to them. It's also shameful that all major historical events are completely revised, and most are not even taught in American schools!I am 56. The other day I met a young man of about 19 or 20 that had never heard of the Holocaust OR the nuclear bombings of Hiroshima & Nagasaki. SMDH
Man's inhumanity to man never ceases to amaze me. How did people of good conscience think that Hitler's plan of extermination of an entire race was a good idea? And those idiots who think the Holocaust never existed, but was just a "conspiracy theory" should be taken out & shot.
As much as the idea is commendable, it's not new (Marina Amaral did it years ago, and published a book of it). And the modifications you did on the color photos made them lose many details (whitened skies and darkened shadows), where a simple white balance adjustment would have been enough.
The black and white photos have more impact on this terrible time colour just softens the impact.
This people in the town always knew when the ovens were burning Dachau's prisoners because their smoke was thin and green... when the prisoners from others camps that were whipped to Dachau to be burned their smoke was thick and yellow!!!
The insanity of Hitler and his plan for a stellar Germany is something nations will never forget. He managed to manipulate many into participating in the unspeakable deaths of thousands. I cannot help but believe that we, as a humanity, will never forget this extreme evil and destruction. Let us always remember the men and women who sacrificed themselves in order to bring light and standing up for the greater good back to our planet.
I remember visiting Daschau in the late 60's as a child and all this time later the thing's I saw are still ingrained in my head, the ovens, gas chambers, doilies and lampshades made from human skin, and mostly the ash grave where it seemed as though you could feel the spirits of these people. When I think of these times in history, it is appalling, yet important never to forget the suffering. It is unfortunate that the truth is not taught in our educational system, not only in our country but in others as well. All of the history should be told not only in this case but others, if not no wonder people turn a blind eye and continue to live in their bubbles as though nothing has happened.
I visited nearly 40 years ago and, while of course it's vitally important to bear witness to the Holocaust, in Dachau the largest group of prisoners were dissidents - Germans and others who spoke or acted against the Nazis, as well as gay men. I believe the third largest group was gypsies, who like Jewish people have been (some would say still are) marginalised and persecuted in some countries, my own included. We should remember them all.
My parents used to take us to Westerbork, there's an observatorium kind of thing, lots of star and planet stuff. Also there's a former concentration camp. I used to beg my parents to see the camp for a change and they always said we would eventually, but not just now. Me being a 5-12 y/o and my siblings being younger than me, I can now see whe they didn't take us there at the time
When I was in high school (late 90s, Canada) we never learnt anything past WW1, classmates were too intent on wasting time. Learned about the Holocaust in English class when we spent two months on The Diary of Anne Frank.
I’m glad that they are beginning to tackle the subject of the Holocaust in primary schools these days. I was shocked a few years ago when people at my college, who were in their early 20s, didn’t know what the Holocaust even was. I just assumed that it was part of society’s collective memory, clearly I was wrong.
It's so weird (and sad, somehow) that it makes such a great difference to your understanding when you put color to it. Great job.
Do you think youth in Europe know more because they're closer to where most of the action happened? Because of this post, I'm making a commitment to teach my children about recent wars. Not the facts like they'll see in text books, but about the people.
Thank you for this! I think the pictures look great and I'm impressed! It really makes the picture more striking after colour has been added and that's what blew me away. You can see the pain, the hunger and the desperation. And those poor kids... Thank you for doing this, sir! Because of people like you we are able to always remember that this is something horrible that happened and maybe that will be what saves humanity from doing the same mistakes sometime in the future.
How many Jews were there in the world before WW2, and how many are there now?
These photographs are horrible and haunting. The color just makes them more real and this breaks my heart. Why do people hate other people? the land of hate is just so mysterious and I wish that nothing this horrible ever happened. Thank you for spreading awareness. Other people (especially the young generation) need to see these photo and I thank you for sharing these with me.
Just... god I'm so dissapointed in you. I was expecting pictures that were improved by loving coloration. To be frank the work looks rushed, is half finished and some pictures were what? Demisted? Because color wise there was no improvement. This is such an important subject it deserved better.
This post showed up in my "latest" feed, and is shown to me as being posted "HISTORY, PHOTOGRAPHY9 HOURS AGO". The comments are all 3 years old except for one at the end. What is going on BoPA? Are you doing a Facebook and pushing posts up based on new comments? Cause, you know, that's not what "latest" means if you're talking about posts.
please stop colorizing pictures.. life in the past was not just desaturated colors
I applaud the sentiments behind the idea but to me coloring neither adds or subtracts from the horror.
I just feel the jews are retaliating against the people who loved and welcomed them after the horrible experience from holocaust. Free Palestine
Those statistics shock me. What is even worse is that with time they are only going to get higher. I was at a Holocaust Memorial in Boston recently and was shocked at a teenager who kept saying, "What are all these names for?" The questions he kept throwing out were amazing but then I realized that at least (the very least) he was asking because the memorial was there. Never forget indeed. Lets hope there are enough people in the world who are not apathetic in the future to let it happen.
And still, there are peple in my country, who compare jewish stars to vaccination (aka, that unvaccinated people are like jewish people - marked by society). Absolutely disgusting. But thanks for the photos, they are a reminder of those, who died (including a big part of my family from my mums side)
the added colour somehow makes them more real, more relate-able, sadder, even more soul shatteringly shocking and they were always these things and more. I guess some people might be able to distance themselves from the events because of the aged black and white world it seems to have been (as apposed to the multi-colour world of today), but there's was an experience that should never be forgotten, always remembered and those lost held forever near. (hope that all makes sense)
It's horrible and heartbreaking what happened to the Jewish people during WW2. Sometimes people forget that there were so many others rounded up, too, like the young Catholic girl whose picture is shown. "Undesirables" of many origins were killed, starting with people with mental illness, the physically infirm, anyone who was not a good picture of what Germany should be. Political prisoners, protesters, the Romany people (my spelling is likely off there), homosexuals, the list is far too long.
Please remember that in the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration/death camp complex not only Jewish people were killed - there were many Polish, Romanian, Russians and other nationalities. I've visited it once and I am not sure I will ever find a courage to re-visit this place. If you have a chance to visit Poland - please go there. And keep in mind that although it was created on Polish ground it was purely of Nazi German origin. We, Polish people, were victims, not co-creators of this crime against mankind. Right now we need to keep reminding of what hate, false accusations and fake-news can lead to. Hitler indeed won elections at some point...
Very moving... How can humans be so cruel to one another? I cannot fathom. Thanks for posting this stark reminder.
My hometown was tormented during WW2. Every 17th of May we place down flower on out memorial for the victims which faces the fjords as not everyone came home.
DON'T READ IF YOU HAVE A WEAK STOMACH I'm from Europe and we learn a lot about WWII in school. Also I've always had an interest, so I read a lot. Concentration camps were that bad and even worse. Nazi's did experiments on people, they poisoned them, electrocuted them, beaten and cut them, performed operations without anasthesia. They invited young mothers to fancy dinners and afterwards let them know they had eaten their own babies. And so many more unspeakable things. Yes people were THAT emaciated. Parents and children were seperated, husbands and wives were seperated. Twins and triplets were experimented on and had to live in constant pain for years and years. No food, no safety for anyone except blond haired, blue eyed "aryan" germans. No clothes or shoes, heads were shaven (not in a nice way, if your scalp bled they didn't care). So many people were dehumanized. It was as awful and horrible as you can imagine and then some
During my nursing career, I was very skilled at starting very difficult IVs. I would get calls from all over the hospital. One evening I got a call to another unit for a gentleman they couldn't get one in. They said they had already tried SIX times in his left arm. Well that pissed me off because of the pain caused & maybe wasted a vein I could've got. I went in. Did my usual thing. He was in his 90's. I only looked at his right arm. I found one, tried. $h!+! I missed I apologized profusely & tried a 2nd time. Success! I apologized for all the tries by others & the pain it caused. His grandson looked at me & said "It's OK. He's tough. He survived Auschwitz". For me, time stopped. What do you say? There aren't the words in any language. Anyway, after I was finished I went out in the hallway & cried. I had just caused him pain. He should NEVER have had ANY PAIN again EVER. Not after Auschwitz.
Some of the comments here show just how selfish and self-centered people have become.
Always breaks my heart when I see these photos. But I personally like the black and white better then the colorized version. The black and white have more emotion in them. Gives a more realistic view of the situation in my opinion. So sad.
I am german, and we also lost family members during that time (my grandma's sister was disabled. They took her).. i have to say, i am tired of this "attention". We will never forget. You have no idea. We grow up, the first thing being tought at school, is our history in detail. I think there are too many countries in the world, that did (and currently do) just as horrible things to their own people, as it happened in my country. With the huge difference- that nobody seems to care that much for any other issued country, that isn't rich west. Did you know, what happened in cambodia? They killed half of their own population. And the world looked away, didn't give a s**t. Let's not even start about china, or ahm almost every african state.
It think the color added to these photos bring with them a clearer perspective and deeper emotions from within. With every picture, my heart broke even more. Thanks for sharing and for the reminder. Keep the lives lost forever in your heart.
My sister & I went to the Auschwitz exhibit at the Union Station in Kansas City this past summer. It was heart rending, and I cried more than once while walking through it. And it's sad that KC is only one of two places that this exhibit is going to be - it needs to be displayed in every large city in the U.S. People around the world need to know the truth about the Holocaust.
I find it a tragedy and shameful that these photos had to be colorized for people to pay attention to them. It's also shameful that all major historical events are completely revised, and most are not even taught in American schools!I am 56. The other day I met a young man of about 19 or 20 that had never heard of the Holocaust OR the nuclear bombings of Hiroshima & Nagasaki. SMDH
Man's inhumanity to man never ceases to amaze me. How did people of good conscience think that Hitler's plan of extermination of an entire race was a good idea? And those idiots who think the Holocaust never existed, but was just a "conspiracy theory" should be taken out & shot.
As much as the idea is commendable, it's not new (Marina Amaral did it years ago, and published a book of it). And the modifications you did on the color photos made them lose many details (whitened skies and darkened shadows), where a simple white balance adjustment would have been enough.
The black and white photos have more impact on this terrible time colour just softens the impact.
This people in the town always knew when the ovens were burning Dachau's prisoners because their smoke was thin and green... when the prisoners from others camps that were whipped to Dachau to be burned their smoke was thick and yellow!!!
The insanity of Hitler and his plan for a stellar Germany is something nations will never forget. He managed to manipulate many into participating in the unspeakable deaths of thousands. I cannot help but believe that we, as a humanity, will never forget this extreme evil and destruction. Let us always remember the men and women who sacrificed themselves in order to bring light and standing up for the greater good back to our planet.
I remember visiting Daschau in the late 60's as a child and all this time later the thing's I saw are still ingrained in my head, the ovens, gas chambers, doilies and lampshades made from human skin, and mostly the ash grave where it seemed as though you could feel the spirits of these people. When I think of these times in history, it is appalling, yet important never to forget the suffering. It is unfortunate that the truth is not taught in our educational system, not only in our country but in others as well. All of the history should be told not only in this case but others, if not no wonder people turn a blind eye and continue to live in their bubbles as though nothing has happened.
I visited nearly 40 years ago and, while of course it's vitally important to bear witness to the Holocaust, in Dachau the largest group of prisoners were dissidents - Germans and others who spoke or acted against the Nazis, as well as gay men. I believe the third largest group was gypsies, who like Jewish people have been (some would say still are) marginalised and persecuted in some countries, my own included. We should remember them all.
My parents used to take us to Westerbork, there's an observatorium kind of thing, lots of star and planet stuff. Also there's a former concentration camp. I used to beg my parents to see the camp for a change and they always said we would eventually, but not just now. Me being a 5-12 y/o and my siblings being younger than me, I can now see whe they didn't take us there at the time
When I was in high school (late 90s, Canada) we never learnt anything past WW1, classmates were too intent on wasting time. Learned about the Holocaust in English class when we spent two months on The Diary of Anne Frank.
I’m glad that they are beginning to tackle the subject of the Holocaust in primary schools these days. I was shocked a few years ago when people at my college, who were in their early 20s, didn’t know what the Holocaust even was. I just assumed that it was part of society’s collective memory, clearly I was wrong.
It's so weird (and sad, somehow) that it makes such a great difference to your understanding when you put color to it. Great job.
Do you think youth in Europe know more because they're closer to where most of the action happened? Because of this post, I'm making a commitment to teach my children about recent wars. Not the facts like they'll see in text books, but about the people.
Thank you for this! I think the pictures look great and I'm impressed! It really makes the picture more striking after colour has been added and that's what blew me away. You can see the pain, the hunger and the desperation. And those poor kids... Thank you for doing this, sir! Because of people like you we are able to always remember that this is something horrible that happened and maybe that will be what saves humanity from doing the same mistakes sometime in the future.
How many Jews were there in the world before WW2, and how many are there now?
These photographs are horrible and haunting. The color just makes them more real and this breaks my heart. Why do people hate other people? the land of hate is just so mysterious and I wish that nothing this horrible ever happened. Thank you for spreading awareness. Other people (especially the young generation) need to see these photo and I thank you for sharing these with me.
Just... god I'm so dissapointed in you. I was expecting pictures that were improved by loving coloration. To be frank the work looks rushed, is half finished and some pictures were what? Demisted? Because color wise there was no improvement. This is such an important subject it deserved better.
This post showed up in my "latest" feed, and is shown to me as being posted "HISTORY, PHOTOGRAPHY9 HOURS AGO". The comments are all 3 years old except for one at the end. What is going on BoPA? Are you doing a Facebook and pushing posts up based on new comments? Cause, you know, that's not what "latest" means if you're talking about posts.
please stop colorizing pictures.. life in the past was not just desaturated colors
I applaud the sentiments behind the idea but to me coloring neither adds or subtracts from the horror.
I just feel the jews are retaliating against the people who loved and welcomed them after the horrible experience from holocaust. Free Palestine