Boris Kowadlo - ‘No more food in the shops’
“In Amsterdam everyone is hungry, there’s no fuel, no gas, no electricity and very little bread. A thousand grams of bread and a kilo of potatoes each week, that’s all the rations we had. Imagine it, one loaf of bread for the whole week! There’s no butter and we can’t get other things either.
There isn’t money to buy food either. A pound of butter costs 90 guilders. If you can get it, the farmers, who still have food, don’t want any money for it, but they do want other things for their potatoes. Gold, silver and precious stones, that’s what the farmers want for their food.”
Source: Boris Kowadlo: fotograaf tussen herinnering en toekomst by Bernadette van Woerkom. Translated from Yiddish by Ariane Zwiers.
Boris Kowadlo
Boris Kowadlo, a Polish Jew, arrives in Amsterdam in the 1930s. Because of the economic crisis, it is difficult finding work as a photographer. During the occupation he goes into hiding and in the last months before the liberation he works for an illegal organisation known as the De Ondergedoken Camara (the Hidden Camara). After the war Kowadlo publishes an impressive series of photographs of the Jewish neighbourhood which is completely empty and bare.
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