Photographing Auschwitz

img421.jpg

H
img421.jpg

  • Tel
  • Apr 26, 2025
  • 1
  • 0
  • 18
Caution Post

A
Caution Post

  • 2
  • 0
  • 38
Hidden

A
Hidden

  • 1
  • 0
  • 38
Is Jabba In?

A
Is Jabba In?

  • 3
  • 0
  • 45
Dog Opposites

A
Dog Opposites

  • 2
  • 3
  • 151

Recent Classifieds

Forum statistics

Threads
197,480
Messages
2,759,725
Members
99,514
Latest member
cukon
Recent bookmarks
0
Joined
Dec 10, 2009
Messages
6,303
Format
Multi Format
I first watched this video because my wife and I were in a group traveling to the Baltics 2 summers ago. One of the places we visited is Auschwitz. We had an excellent tour guide that gave depth to our experience. She didn't tell us not to photograph the camp. Our whole group was very respectful during our tour. Most of the folks in our group photographed the camp and was no way disrespectful to the memory of the people that perished in the 2 camps. Being an avid photographer, I took pictures too.

Now there's this video.


I do understand where he's coming from. However, could this video leave the impression that anybody that takes pictures in the camps disrespectful of the history and memory of Auschwitz? I left the tour feeling that there's no depth of evil or goodness human beings are capable of.
 

BrianShaw

Member
Joined
Nov 30, 2005
Messages
16,338
Location
La-la-land
Format
Multi Format
The notion that the taking of a photograph disrespects those who perished is something I just can't understand. That's just being too sensitive. I've seen at least one appalling video on U-tube where folks were not very respectful so maybe that's what drives such an anti-photographic attitude.

But the longer I live, the more I understand that some profound experiences are best experienced in the mind and heart rather than as a photographic image. That said, if some folks don't see photographs of such sites they may not fully understand the reality of the situation.

I'd take photographs too...
 

Darkroom317

Member
Joined
Mar 2, 2009
Messages
653
Location
Mishawaka, IN
Format
Large Format
A lot of the criticism I have seen about photographing in places like Auschwitz has do to with people taking taking selfies with their phones. To me it is disrespectful to take smiling selfies and post them on instagram from places like that.

As far as regular photography I'm sure most photographers show the respect that these sites deserve. Michael Kenna's concentration camp work comes to mind when thinking about this issue.
 
OP
OP
Mainecoonmaniac
Joined
Dec 10, 2009
Messages
6,303
Format
Multi Format
A lot of the criticism I have seen about photographing in places like Auschwitz has do to with people taking taking selfies with their phones. To me it is disrespectful to take smiling selfies and post them on instagram from places like that..
These are probably the "Bucket list" people. It is disrespectful. They're too involved in documenting being there than soaking up the experiences though painful as it is.
 

TonyB65

Member
Joined
Dec 13, 2017
Messages
265
Location
Hungerford
Format
Multi Format
I'm going there in January, I will take photos, but I won't take them where I'm asked not to, which is the right thing to do. Recording images where it is allowed enables other people to see what it is, and is important in educating people who may never go. I will be using black and white film in order to shoot sympathetically to the period and also it seems fitting to me personally. I will behave respectfully as is fitting for such a site. I don't have a bucket list, I just do everything I can while I can, which is what I've always tried to do. In order to have an opinion on some things sometimes you have to see them for yourself. I went to see a bullfight just for that very reason, it's not something I think I'd do again but at least I can have a balanced opinion on it and speak with some experience, that's also why I've chosen to visit Auschwitz, to better understand what happened, and I definitely will not be taking selfies that's for sure.
 

AgX

Member
Joined
Apr 5, 2007
Messages
29,990
Location
Germany
Format
Multi Format
I just looked trough visitor rules of few former camps and I found no prohibition of private photography, but one should inquire at the very place.
 

David A. Goldfarb

Moderator
Moderator
Joined
Sep 7, 2002
Messages
19,981
Location
Honolulu, HI
Format
Large Format
I’ve followed this issue, and it’s mainly the selfies that are in question, not photography in general.
 

dabsond

Subscriber
Joined
May 22, 2015
Messages
228
Location
Dover, DE
Format
Multi Format
I had the opportunity to tour the Dachau Camp while I was stationed in Germany. In the museum, there was a photograph of an inmate who was killed while trying to escape through the fence. I studied that photograph and found the location where it was taken. I then took a single photograph with the same perspective as the photo in the museum. To this day, this photograph or just the act of being there and taking that photograph is one of the most powerful memories I have. I don't find taking photographs of these subjects disrespectful, in fact I think it can be seen as paying proper respect if done correctly.
 

RattyMouse

Member
Joined
Oct 18, 2011
Messages
6,046
Location
Ann Arbor, Mi
Format
Multi Format
I had the opportunity to tour the Dachau Camp while I was stationed in Germany. In the museum, there was a photograph of an inmate who was killed while trying to escape through the fence. I studied that photograph and found the location where it was taken. I then took a single photograph with the same perspective as the photo in the museum. To this day, this photograph or just the act of being there and taking that photograph is one of the most powerful memories I have. I don't find taking photographs of these subjects disrespectful, in fact I think it can be seen as paying proper respect if done correctly.

Absolutely right.
 

Photo Engineer

Subscriber
Joined
Apr 19, 2005
Messages
29,021
Location
Rochester, NY
Format
Multi Format
Movitone news ran documentaries on these camps in the '40s at most movie theaters. There was extensive coverage of events from Nazi archives and from Allied photographers, and it was memorable and often gruesome. Much was not edited. It was inhuman, and at that point, I decided that I would be the opposite. Photography did a good thing IMHO.

PE
 

Rob MacKillop

Member
Joined
Jun 14, 2013
Messages
230
Location
Edinburgh
Format
Medium Format
A friend of mine visit Auschwitz some twenty years ago with some kind of cine camera. When he let me see his film of Auschwitz, it was of a butterfly trying to escape through a window, but continually failing. I found it deeply moving. Protest can be powerful when it is subtle.
 

cb1

Member
Joined
Sep 7, 2015
Messages
111
Location
D/FW, TX
Format
Multi Format
When I was in The Army, in Germany I went on a tour of Dachau, I brought my camera with me. I took dozens of very powerful photos with B&W film. It was a cold, overcast day with pockets of snow on the ground. Those are some of the best pictures I have from my tour in Germany.
I proudly show those pics and I remind the viewers that this should never be forgotten less it happens again.
the original wire and gate taken in 1986
Dachau-Munich (24).jpg
 

mooseontheloose

Moderator
Joined
Sep 20, 2007
Messages
4,110
Location
Kyoto, Japan
Format
Multi Format
I do understand where he's coming from. However, could this video leave the impression that anybody that takes pictures in the camps disrespectful of the history and memory of Auschwitz? I left the tour feeling that there's no depth of evil or goodness human beings are capable of.

I don't think so. I mean, he was at the camp shooting video himself. I think the video is really about the inappropriate behaviour of tourists at these types of sites, or in situations where it is absolutely not appropriate. Just look at what happened in Italy recently - a Canadian woman was struck by a train, and as medics were helping her, a man took a selfie with that situation happening behind him in the background. While there may not be restrictions at theses sites now, maybe, if enough people don't respect the rules, they will eventually ban photography there.

As for myself, I'm planning to go to Auschwitz next year (it was supposed to be this summer, but I had to postpone the trip). I did a course in the history of antisemitism while doing my bachelor's many years ago, and I think we spent at least half of the full-year course on the Holocaust itself, so this is a place I've always wanted to see and pay my respects too. I do plan to take photos there, but only when and where it is appropriate. Hopefully I won't see the behaviour the man in the video describes, as I'm sure that would upset me as much as it upset him.
 

RattyMouse

Member
Joined
Oct 18, 2011
Messages
6,046
Location
Ann Arbor, Mi
Format
Multi Format
Movitone news ran documentaries on these camps in the '40s at most movie theaters. There was extensive coverage of events from Nazi archives and from Allied photographers, and it was memorable and often gruesome. Much was not edited. It was inhuman, and at that point, I decided that I would be the opposite. Photography did a good thing IMHO.

PE

Nothing more disgusting than holocaust deniers. Photographs help combat such idiocy.
 
OP
OP
Mainecoonmaniac
Joined
Dec 10, 2009
Messages
6,303
Format
Multi Format
Nothing more disgusting than holocaust deniers. Photographs help combat such idiocy.

I completely agree with you, but in the age of Trump and fake news on the internet, denying the Holocaust is more possible than ever. We have to be on guard for people that tell us otherwise. Like those that cause division and fan the flames of hate to further their ends like the Nazi Party. As the saying goes, "Those that don't know their history are condemned to repeat it.
 

Arklatexian

Member
Joined
Jul 28, 2014
Messages
1,777
Location
Shreveport,
Format
Multi Format
A lot of the criticism I have seen about photographing in places like Auschwitz has do to with people taking taking selfies with their phones. To me it is disrespectful to take smiling selfies and post them on instagram from places like that.

As far as regular photography I'm sure most photographers show the respect that these sites deserve. Michael Kenna's concentration camp work comes to mind when thinking about this issue.
As much as I hate to say it, more and more "regular" photography today is done with cell phones. I don't think I will ever get accustomed to that but as in the past, I will be required to. I doubt many, if any in this group, would be guilty of disrespect in this situation. What the person in the video is guilty of, however, is youth and not realizing, or caring, what happens to our memories as we age and those pictures may become the only memories that a person has of a dark period in our time. I am sure that there were similar periods and places, all over the world, where the same things took place, especially during the "Middle Ages", before and after with no "photography" to record anything. So record your memories and tell people where they can go, if and when, they object.......Regards!
 

Sirius Glass

Subscriber
Joined
Jan 18, 2007
Messages
50,129
Location
Southern California
Format
Multi Format
My daughter taught in Poland for two years and she told me that the school bring their students to visit the death camps. While the student are their they are very disrespectful and make fun of the victims and the whole experience. She said it is very disheartening to see that going in. Now the Polish government prosecutes people who point out the complicity of the Polish people during World War II.
 

Theo Sulphate

Member
Joined
Jul 3, 2014
Messages
6,492
Location
Gig Harbor
Format
Multi Format
...but in the age of Trump and fake news on the internet, denying the Holocaust is more possible than ever...

I believe the exact opposite is true. The reason is that communication through social media, blogs, phones, etc., give everyone a voice. Prior to that, crackpot theories could flourish and gain a following before they could be researched and debunked. Now the debunking can be - and is - done very quickly.

We do not have a sudden growth in Holocaust deniers in this country despite the media focusing on it - such people have always been a fraction of a fraction of a percent. At least that's my impression because I've never met one in my entire life and my social circles are fairly right wing.

Iran's government denies the holocaust; I suspect their people know the truth.

In high school, my best friend was Jewish and we studied WWII together on our own as a common interest. We learned German together. I wouldn't photograph Auschwitz or any such place, not because I think it's disrespectful, but because I wouldn't want images of that place of horrors in my home. To those that think differently of photographing it, that's fine and I respect their decision which is theirs alone and for their own reasons.
 
Last edited:

Arthurwg

Subscriber
Joined
Dec 16, 2005
Messages
2,540
Location
Taos NM
Format
Medium Format
I personally don't think there's anything that should not be photographed, and I resent this guy in the video lecturing me in this self righteous way. I'd say that takes a lot of nerve. Some folks have a need to place themselves above others, and to lay down the law from what the believe to be a higher moral principle.
 

JC Arts

Member
Joined
Nov 30, 2017
Messages
2
Location
Ireland
Format
Multi Format
Was it Lee Miller who found herself trying to make a good composition of corpses?

The photographers that were there in 1945 had a difficult task.

:sad:
 

AgX

Member
Joined
Apr 5, 2007
Messages
29,990
Location
Germany
Format
Multi Format
I personally don't think there's anything that should not be photographed, and I resent this guy in the video lecturing me in this self righteous way. I'd say that takes a lot of nerve. Some folks have a need to place themselves above others, and to lay down the law from what the believe to be a higher moral principle.

Meanwhile we have new legislation here in Germany that in some new cases (other than military installations as in the past) makes the mere act of taking a photograph a criminal offence.
 

Slixtiesix

Subscriber
Joined
Jul 31, 2006
Messages
1,387
Format
Medium Format
I think it all depends. Doing "fancy" selfies seems disgusting of course, but then there are a lot of photos taken with deference that fully acknowledge what had happened at these places. The Concentration Camp series by Michael Kenna may be the best example. So I do not think one should condemn photographing at these places in general, but it should be done with the needed awareness.
Imagine, if there existed no photos of these camps at all, most people would not even know about them, which would be very sad. There are many photos that were taken right after the liberation of the camps by American soldiers, you know, these photos that show the hecatombs of dead bodies and all the inmates close to the brink of death. I think most of us would consider it very inappropriate to take pictures from people under these conditions, but in this very situation, it was the right thing, since otherwise these atrocities would have never been documented.
 

rpavich

Member
Joined
Aug 24, 2015
Messages
1,521
Location
West virginia, USA
Format
35mm
The guy in the video was specific about what he thought was wrong; it was the taking of pictures when asked not to, coupled with doing the selfie thing in a disrespectful way. He didn't condemn all photography at the camp.

You can be disrespectful no matter what you are shooting with; phone or film camera.
 

RalphLambrecht

Subscriber
Joined
Sep 19, 2003
Messages
14,562
Location
K,Germany
Format
Medium Format
I first watched this video because my wife and I were in a group traveling to the Baltics 2 summers ago. One of the places we visited is Auschwitz. We had an excellent tour guide that gave depth to our experience. She didn't tell us not to photograph the camp. Our whole group was very respectful during our tour. Most of the folks in our group photographed the camp and was no way disrespectful to the memory of the people that perished in the 2 camps. Being an avid photographer, I took pictures too.

Now there's this video.


I do understand where he's coming from. However, could this video leave the impression that anybody that takes pictures in the camps disrespectful of the history and memory of Auschwitz? I left the tour feeling that there's no depth of evil or goodness human beings are capable of.

I photographed KZ Ravensbr¨ck in depth; had he whole site to me for a There is is no disrespect in recording history; especially, history that should never be forgotten to avoid repeating itself! Ravensbrück was an all-women's camp with the typical horror of these camps.Ausschwitz had a special status because, it was liberated by Russian soldiers and Russia used it to demonstrate the horror of the Nazi regime just like the US did with Dachau and Britain did with Bergen-Belsen and Buchenwald; This sometimes hides the fact that there were several hundred camps in the territory of the German Reich;all a crime against humanity!
 
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links.
To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here.

PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY:



Ilford ADOX Freestyle Photographic Stearman Press Weldon Color Lab Blue Moon Camera & Machine
Top Bottom