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Female Holocaust survivor’s portrait defaced for 3rd time at Jerusalem exhibit

  • June 28, 2021

A portrait of a female Holocaust survivor was defaced for the third time outside the Jerusalem City Hall where it was on display as part of an exhibit that tells the stories of 400 survivors of the Nazi atrocities during World War II.

Organizers and the country’s main women’s rights group blamed ultra-Orthodox activists for the vandalism, with the latter organization saying it was part of an effort to drive the presence of women from the public sphere.

The three-meter-high double portrait of Peggy Parnass was defaced with spray paint sometime in the past few days, Channel 12 news reported.

The exhibition has been on display since April in the Safra Square forecourt of the Jerusalem municipality complex. It was due to end in August.

According to the Lonka Project, which organized the exhibition, it is the third time that the photos of Parnass have been vandalized.

It was unclear why this particular picture had been targeted when the pictures of other women were also displayed, but it could have been linked to its location.

“Fingers crossed the culprit (most likely an ultra-Orthodox Jewish youth from a nearby neighborhood), does not return for a fourth round of vandalism to this photo and the Jerusalem Municipality is able to install a video camera in this spot,” the Lonka Project said in a statement on its website.

The photograph, printed on special protective paper, was cleaned up on Sunday, the Lonka Project said.

The Jerusalem Municipality said in a statement that it “takes a very serious view of the incident and will act to replace the damaged display with a new one.”

The municipality said it would also increase security patrols in the area.

The Israel Women’s Network (IWN) said in a statement that the vandalism “is shocking to us, but, to our great regret, not at all surprising.”

“The reality is that the destruction of images of women in the public sphere in Israel occurs on a daily basis throughout the country,” the IWN said and pointed to similar incidents of defacement in the capital over the past year including photos of hospital nurses who were fighting the coronavirus outbreak and medal-winning gymnast Linoy Ashram.

The IWN said such vandalism goes beyond the simple act of defacement and impacts women and girls when they encounter the phenomenon.

“As women, we are all hurt, every woman and girl who sees the defaced signs and internalizes the message about their place in the public space,” the statement said.

It criticized the response by the municipality and police saying “the criminals have no reason to stop.”

So far, no complaint has been filed with Jerusalem district police although the force said they “proactively referred the matter to the Investigations and Intelligence Division,” Channel 12 news reported.

Jerusalem city council member Ofer Berkovich, of the opposition Hitorerut (Awakening) movement, tweeted Sunday that the incident was “a disgrace.”

“There is a link between the harm to women and harm to Holocaust survivors,” he wrote and noted that though the general area is well covered by security cameras, no arrests have yet been made.

Speaking to Channel 12 Berkovich called for stricter enforcement against those who aim to drive women out of the public arena and suggested as a response there be a counter-campaign to boost images of women in public.

“It is time, as an appropriate response, to expand the number of images of women in the public sphere, both by private and municipal bodies,” he said.

In 2019, after posters of Jerusalem mayoral candidate Rachel Azaria were defaced by ultra-Orthodox activists, she responded by organizing for posters of women to be displayed on buses in the capital.

The posters under the title “I have a dream” envisioned a society in which women were not discriminated against on various issues.

Parnass, was born in Hamburg in 1927. Her parents were both killed in the Treblinka extermination camp. She, and her brother, survived the war by staying, separately, with different families in other countries. After the war she worked as a reporter, writing essays on Nazi crime and human rights. She also authored books and has appeared in films and television program. Parnass now lives in her home town Hamburg.

The Lonka Project exhibit, an initiative by photographers Jim Hollander and Rina Castelnuovo, was set up to mark Holocaust Remembrance Day and includes the portraits and stories of 400 survivors captured by photographers around the world. Each photograph is accompanied by the story of the survivor in English, Hebrew and Arabic.

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