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Charles Bronfman Prize 2009

Israel and Ukraine sign agreement on works of Jewish artist
Updated: 04/Mar/2008 14:52
Bruno Schulz, Carriage Driver, Drohobycz, 1941-1942.
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JERUSALEM (EJP)---Israel and Ukraine have signed an agreement relating to the works of Jewish Ukrainian author and artist Bruno Schulz.

According to the agreement, the Schulz works, currently located at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem, will be recognized as the property and cultural wealth of Ukraine, and will be on temporary loan at the Holocaust Memorial Institute for 20 years, after which the loan will be automatically renewed every five years. 
 
The agreement was signed by Pinchas Avivi, deputy director-general in the Israeli Foreign Ministry, and Ukraine’s Ambassador to Israel Ihor Tymofieiev. Ukraine’s Vice Prime Minister Ivan Vasyunik attended the signing ceremony. 
 
Bruno Schulz was born in Drohobycz, then located in Poland but today in Ukraine. 
 
A Jewish author and artist, he was forced to embellish with fairy-tale protagonists the walls of the children’s room in a house occupied by Nazi officer Felix Landau.
 
He was later shot to death by an SS officer on a day of pogroms in the city of Drohobycz, only because he was a Jew.  Some 60 years after they were made, the works were discovered in a state of neglect and disrepair. 
 
Yad Vashem acquired the works, with the agreement of the family, in whose home they were found, and the approval and blessing of the Mayor of Drohobycz, and a team of experts brought the works to Yad Vashem in 2001. 
 
Since then, they have undergone professional conservation to keep them in the condition in which they were found and to ensure that no further deterioration of the materials and colors occurs in the future.
 
The conditions under which the murals were created, by the sole wish of the Nazi perpetrator and under his direct command - that is, forced labor - make them Holocaust artifacts. 
 

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Day in history
 
5 July 1960
The then 50-year old Jewish community of the Belgian Congo, Africa, consisting of 2500 Jews fled in the wake of riots which followed independence

Eastern European Jews from Romania and Poland first arrived in Congo in 1907. Following these immigrants, several Jewish families arrived from South Africa and the land of Israel. In 1911, Sephardic Jews from the island of Rhodes settled in Congo.

 
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