GALLERY

Photo montage for Unearthed contains photos of family members, victims of Nazi onslaught and survivors, plus documents found in archives. It is accompanied by the song Freeling (Springtime) written by Shmerke Kaczerginski and performed by Betty Segal. Kaczerginski wrote that Franya was "one of the finest artists of the Yiddish theater." The song was written in the Vilna ghetto following the death of Shmerke Kaczerginski’s wife, Barbara Kaufman (Kaczerginski) in April 1943. It was first performed in the Vilna Theater’s production, “Dos Yogenish in Fas” (The Haste in the Barrel). It was later sung in concentration camps and after the war. A lover seeks his beloved in the streets and alleys of the ghetto, but cannot find her. He asks the spring to take away his woes, and replace them with his fortune, his beloved. The man continues to go to work, each day passing through the gate and remembering his meetings there with his beloved. Spring comes, and with it the blossoming trees, but the lover’s yearnings only deepen. In his imagination, he sees his beloved joyously coming to meet him, adorned with flowers. The song’s melody employs a tango rhythm. The use of a tango in love songs was common in interwar Jewish culture, as well as other cultures. The melody combines the past and the present, reinforcing the disparity between the two. (Yad Vashem)