Outremont Gallery | The Hasidim in intimacy

The Outremont Gallery presents A revived world, the exhibition of photographs by Agnieszka Traczewska taken within Hasidic Jewish communities around the world. Exceptional photographs of the daily life of Hasidim taken over 15 years by this Polish artist thanks to very privileged access.




Agnieszka Traczewska is not Hasidic. Based in New York, she was born a Catholic and lived her childhood in Krakow, not far from an old neighborhood of Hasidic Jews. “I knew absolutely nothing about them and their traditions,” she says. But I knew that before the Second World War there were 65,000 in my city and that after the war the survivors had left the country. When I grew up, I saw traces of their presence, cemeteries, synagogues. I had the impression that the existence of this part of Krakow’s history could also be eradicated. »

The photographer was first interested in the Hasidim of Polish origin who returned to Poland to rekindle their roots, in particular by visiting Jewish cemeteries. She published her first book, Returns, illustrating these returns of Hasidim to the native land of their ancestors. Then, she widened her interest.


PHOTO AGNIESZKA TRACZEWSKA, PROVIDED BY THE GALLERY

A Hasidic Jew with his child, in Jerusalem

The photos on display were thus taken within Hasidic communities in Brooklyn, Israel, Belgium and even Poland. Not only do they show great technical mastery, but they also immerse us in the intimacy of Hasidic families as is rarely possible, given their very private and communal way of life.


PHOTO MARTIN CHAMBERLAND, THE PRESS

Photographer Agnieszka Traczewska was able to photograph a father with his son in the family bathroom.

After having forged very strong ties with Hasidim for years, the artist was able to attend weddings and ceremonies of homage to ancestors. She was even able, in a bathroom, to photograph a New York father who shortened the edges of his son’s twists with a candle.

The photographs thus evoke the salient features of this Jewish community which are the veneration of the family, the transmission of traditions and devotion to Hasidism, this mystical current of Judaism founded in the 18th century.e century by a rabbi from a region that was once Polish and now Ukrainian.


PHOTO MARTIN CHAMBERLAND, THE PRESS

View of the exhibition

These images show religious celebrations, Hasidic Jews descended from a Holocaust survivor praying inside a gas chamber, Auschwitz, Poland. Shabbat and Hanukkah rituals. Children enjoying Purim, the Jewish holiday when the rules are relaxed. And the moving scene of two young Hasidim who find themselves alone in their room for the first time, after their union ceremony. A photograph rewarded with a magazine award National Geographic.


PHOTO MARTIN CHAMBERLAND, THE PRESS

Photograph by Agnieszka Traczewska of a celebration of the Jewish holiday of Purim in Israel

The exhibition also illustrates how these communities of large families are growing all over the world, hence the title of the exhibition, A revived world. Agnieszka Traczewska’s work will soon continue in Montreal, as she has developed ties there with the Hasidim of Outremont and Blainville.

This presentation at the Galerie d’Outremont was produced on the initiative and thanks to the collaboration of the Consulate General of the Republic of Poland in Montreal. The opening took place on April 18, the international day of remembrance of the Holocaust perpetrated by the Nazis during the Second World War. That day also coincided with the 80e anniversary of the uprising of the inhabitants of the Jewish ghetto in Warsaw in 1943.


PHOTO MARTIN CHAMBERLAND, THE PRESS

The Consul of Poland in Montreal, Dariusz Wisniewski

Poland’s support for this exhibition is part of the country’s desire to give Jews back their full place in society, even if there are not many Jews left in Poland compared to the 3.3 million who live there. lived before 1939, i.e. 10% of the population. The horror of the concentration camps set up in Poland between 1941 and 1945 meant that there were only 380,000 Polish Jews left in 1945. “Many of the survivors left after the Second World War because they did not want to live on the land where members of their family had been exterminated,” said the Polish consul in Montreal, Dariusz Wisniewski.

  • Writing the last words of a Torah scroll, Izaak Synagogue, Agnieszka Traczewska, Krakow, Poland

    PHOTO MARTIN CHAMBERLAND, THE PRESS

    Writing the last words of a Torah scroll, Izaak Synagogue, Agnieszka Traczewska, Krakow, Poland

  • Morning prayers of Hasidic Jews at Mount Meron, Israel

    PHOTO AGNIESZKA TRACZEWSKA, PROVIDED BY THE GALLERY

    Morning prayers of Hasidic Jews at Mount Meron, Israel

  • Home of the new Torah scroll, Krakow, Poland

    PHOTO AGNIESZKA TRACZEWSKA, PROVIDED BY THE GALLERY

    Home of the new Torah scroll, Krakow, Poland

1/3

Agnieszka Traczewska’s exhibition does not evoke political and social questions. It’s not about her, she explained to us. His approach is documentary and sociological. We can have our own approach to religious questions and appreciate his artistic work, because it challenges our civic sense to accept the social diversity of our Western societies, even to rejoice in it. So that harmony and peace arise from respect for differences.

A revived worldby Agnieszka Traczewska, at Galerie Outremont, until May 28


source site-53