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341 DELAWARE AVE. BUFFALO, NY 14202
t: 716‑854‑1694  f: 716‑854‑1696

 
 

GALLERY HOURS:
Tuesday–Friday 11:00am–6:00pm

Saturday 11:00am–2:00pm.

Media Arts Program
 

Saturday, April 27, 2024 at 6:30 pm

CEPA Gallery presents

The Nazis, The Rabbi, and The Camera

6:30 Meet and Mingle
7:00 Screening
7:50 Jill Enfield's presentation and Q+A







Photographer and rabbi Frank Dabba Smith doesn't believe in simple theories. "Black-and-white views don't get anyone anywhere," he says. That's why, even as a young man, he traveled to Germany, the country that, on the one hand, is responsible for the death of his relatives in Poland, but, on the other, gave birth to Frank Dabba Smith's greatest passion - the Leica 35mm camera.

As a young student, Frank had also read how Leica company boss Ernst Leitz II helped Jews in and around Wetzlar during the Nazi era. He later contacted the Leitz family. The grandson of Ernst Leitz II, Knut Kühn-Leitz, had had a very close relationship with his grandfather until his death in 1956. But he had never said anything about the National Socialist era, and certainly not about his help for the oppressed.

Among those rescued by Ernst Leitz was the family of Heinrich Ehrenfeld, owner of a Frankfurt photo store. Once in the U.S., the family changed its name from Ehrenfeld to Enfield, and the granddaughter Jill Enfield is now known worldwide for alternative photographic developing and processing methods. She has been in contact with Frank for years.

The film takes us to the original locations of the action in Wetzlar, New York and Frankfurt am Main. In addition to Frank Dabba Smith and Jill Enfield, Oliver Nass, great-grandson of Ernst Leitz II, also comments on the events of that time.