92-Year-Old Nechama Tec, Respected Scholar and Holocaust Survivor from Poland, Passes Away

92-Year-Old Nechama Tec, Respected Scholar and Holocaust Survivor from Poland, Passes Away


Nechama Tec, ​a Polish Jew who pretended to be Roman Catholic to survive the Holocaust and then became‍ a Holocaust scholar, writing about Jews as heroic resisters and ⁢why certain people, even antisemites, became rescuers, ⁣died ⁣on Aug. 3 at her home in Manhattan. She was 92.

Her death was confirmed by her son, ‍Roland.

In‌ “Defiance: The Bielski Partisans” (1993), Dr. Tec’s best-known book, she described the courageous actions of Tuvia Bielski, who commanded a resistance ‍group that fought the Germans and, more important, saved some 1,200​ Jews.⁢ The ⁤partisans entered ghettos under ​siege and brought Jews back to⁣ the Belarusian⁤ forest,‍ where Mr. Bielski had built a community for them.

“Defiance” gave Dr. Tec a platform to show that Jews saved other Jews during the war and were more active in resisting‌ the⁢ Nazis than some have commonly⁤ believed.

When a friend suggested‍ to the filmmaker Edward Zwick that ‍“Defiance” would make a good movie, he was not immediately ⁢persuaded.

“Not another movie about⁣ victims,” he recalled his response when he wrote in The New York Times about directing the film, released in 2008, ‍which starred ⁢Daniel Craig as Tuvia Bielski and Liev Schreiber as his brother Zus.

“No, this ‌is a story about Jewish heroes,”⁣ he said his friend told him. “Like the Maccabees, only better.”

As⁢ Mr. ​Zwick put ‍it, “Rather than victims wearing yellow⁢ stars, here were fighters in fur chapkas brandishing submachine guns.”

By then ⁤Dr. Tec had written ​“When Light ‍Pierced the ‍Darkness: Christian Rescue of Jews​ in Nazi-Occupied Poland”​ (1986). Her interviews with rescuers for that book yielded a portrait⁣ of Christians who hid Jews, despite the likelihood ⁢of being imprisoned or killed for providing such aid. They ⁢were, she‍ concluded, outsiders who were ‍marginal in their communities; had a history of performing good deeds; did⁢ not ⁢view their actions as heroic; and did not agonize over being helpful.

The cover⁣ of Dr. Tec’s book ​“Defiance.”

“Many ‍were casually antisemitic, but that‌ wasn’t their prime purpose in life,” said Christopher R. Browning, a ‌Holocaust expert who is a professor emeritus of history⁤ at the University of North Carolina and who edited, with Dr. Tec and Richard⁣ S. Hollander, a collection of‍ letters written by‍ Mr. Hollander’s Polish Jewish family from 1939 to 1942. “Using her skills as a sociologist, she was able to ‌portray ⁢a more complex spectrum of interactions than the simplistic ones that people‍ who didn’t collect empirical data as she had.”

Nechama ⁢Bawnik was born on May 15, 1931, in Lublin,‌ Poland. Her father, Roman, owned a chemical factory. Her mother, Esther (Finkelstein) Bawnik, was a​ homemaker.

Soon after the Nazis occupied Poland in 1939, Mr. Bawnik transferred title​ of his ‍factory, rather than have the Nazis confiscate it,⁤ to his foreman, who also gave‌ him a job and a place for the Bawniks, including Nechama’s older sister, ⁣Giza, to live on the top floor‌ of the⁤ building. ⁤Nechama hid in…

2023-08-13 16:41:11
Original from www.nytimes.com
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