Holiday: Yom HaShoah/Holocaust Remembrance Day,  Holocaust Remembrance

Why Is The Butterfly A Symbol Of The Holocaust?

Art Made in concentration camp painting of butterfly
The butterfly has become a symbol for the 1.5 million children murdered in the Holocaust and for Holocaust Education, and I did a little research to find the source. What I was truly stunned to discover is that there are three separate sources in which concentration camp victims used the butterfly in their art and poetry. A connection that I haven't seen written anywhere, but may or may not have been in the minds of the artists, at least in the painting above, is that the yellow butterfly can be likened to the yellow Jewish star that Jews were forced to wear on their clothing…….a star however that is not about limitations but rather that takes flight and lives on forever, in stark contrast to the goals of Nazi Germany and their desire to exterminate the Jewish people.

Keep reading for some very moving information about butterflies and the Holocaust…..

Buterflies and The holocaust, Source #1:

A Painting: Karl Bodek and Kurt Conrad Löw, One Spring (1941)

A collaboration between two artists interned in the Gurs Camp in southern France, the very small painting shows a butterfly on barbed wire with a distant view of the mountains on the Spanish border. Kurt Löw, from Vienna, was ultimately able to flee into Switzerland from France, but Bordek, from Chernivisti, was sent to Auschwitz and murdered. “One of them ended up with the role of the butterfly, the other did not.” (Credit: Yad Vashem Art Museum, Jerusalem)

Buterflies and The holocaust, Source #2:

A Personal Recollection From Dr. Elizabeth Kubler-Ross

Dr. Elizabeth Kubler-Ross, a doctor widely known for her work on death and dying, wrote in her book The Wheel of Life, A Memoir of Living and Dying, about her journey to the site of the Maidanek concentration camp in Poland after World War II. She visited the children’s barracks, where she encountered clothes and little shoes tossed aside, but she also saw something that at first surprised and then amazed her. Carved into the walls with pebbles and fingernails were butterflies, hundreds and hundreds of them. Spellbound by the sight of butterflies drawn on the wall, she couldn’t help but wonder why they were there and what they meant. Twenty-five years later, after listening to hundreds of terminally ill patients, she finally realized that the prisoners in the camps must have known that they were going to die. “They knew that soon they would become butterflies. Once dead, they would be out of that hellish place. Not tortured anymore. Not separated from their families. Not sent to gas chambers. None of this gruesome life mattered anymore. Soon they would leave their bodies the way a butterfly leaves its cocoon. And I realized that was the message they wanted to leave for future generations. . . .It also provided the imagery that I would use for the rest of my career to explain the process of death and dying.”

Source: www.spiritofbutterflies.com

Buterflies and The holocaust, Source #3:

A Poem written by Pavel Freidmann

In 1964, the butterfly took on new significance with the publication of a poem by Pavel Friedmann, a young Czech who wrote it while in the Terezin Concentration Camp and ultimately died in Auschwitz in 1944. In a few poignant lines, “The Butterfly” voiced the spirit of the 1.5 million children who perished in the Holocaust.

In 1996, it inspired staff and supporters of Holocaust Museum Houston (HMH) to launch The Butterfly Project. HMH designed The Butterfly Project to connect a new generation of children to the children who perished in the Nazi era. Three educators designed activities and lesson plans to convey to students the enormity of the loss of innocent life.

 Source: The Butterfly Project

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4 Comments

  • Giselle Zangirolimo

    Tudo muito triste
    Só a evolução humana salva
    Esperamos que isso não se repita, porem, o que acontece ao redor do mundo é o holocausto vigiado.
    Muita paz pra todos os judeus.
    Beijos
    Giselle

  • Gabriel Stanley

    Miriam Rothschild in her book ‘Butterfly cooing like a dove’ has a photo of a red butterfly drawn with crayon on concrete. It stopped her in her tracks as she was walking on rocky ground in Jerusalem and looking at flowers when she saw the image. She explained that every Jew and Jewess knows what that image means – and now so do I.