Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/08/22
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Patrick, This was sent to my e-mail address, I believe by mistake. Kent Smith unipac@teleport.com LUG - ---------- > From: Patrick G. Sobalvarro <pgs@sobalvarro.org> > To: Marc James Small <msmall@roanoke.infi.net> > Cc: leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us > Subject: Re: Riefenstahl > Date: Friday, August 22, 1997 12:02 AM > > At 12:56 PM 8/21/97 -0400, Marc James Small wrote: > >No, Leni did the best in troubled times. I doubt if any of us would have > >done much differently, given the tenor of the times in which she worked. > > Oh, I don't know about that. I'm not so sure of myself as to say that I > would have been above what Leni Riefenstahl did, but I do know that many > people were above it. When my wife and I visited her cousins in Germany a > couple of years ago, we spent a few days with her cousin Adolf, a man I > like very much, who had been both a civilian and a soldier under the Nazis. > One of the stories he told us during a long afternoon walking around > Schramberg, where he lives, was about the people who were taken away by the > police in the period leading up to the war. Schramberg is not a very big > town, and it wasn't as big in the thirties as it is now. Still as we > walked in the ruins of an old castle looking over the valley he told us > about a plaque down in the town square, a plaque with a list of names on > it. I don't remember exactly how many he said there were, but I think it > was about ten. Some of them were the names of Jewish citizens of > Schramberg who were killed by the Nazis simply on the basis of their > ancestry. The others -- six or seven, if memory serves -- were killed for > political subversion. > > Think about that. We don't think too much about those people now. > Probably most of them were leftists -- union organizers, teachers, cranks, > "intellectuals." The likes of Fritz Lang and Marlene Dietrich left Nazi > Germany and went away to America, where they made money and movies and > lived long and were famous. Leni Riefenstahl stayed in Nazi Germany and > collaborated and still goes diving and has gallery exhibitions and some > gigolo in a fancy car to drive her around. > > Those citizens of Schramberg were killed. No aftermath. No huddling in > the ruins and recovery and then economic miracle and prosperity and growing > old surrounded by your family. No surviving. They died because they saw > something evil and they just wouldn't go along with it even though everyone > else was doing it. And they never saw the far side of it. For all they > knew, the Nazis would win and prosper and they themselves would never be > remembered as anything but traitors -- but they just wouldn't do it. > > They have a plaque. > > Cousin Adolf says they were stupid, to attempt to resist such a powerful, > repressive and popular regime. I wouldn't say that. Thank goodness I have > never yet been in the circumstances those people were, because I wouldn't > presume to say I'm as good as they were, but I certainly hope! that if I > were I would have the courage and integrity to end up like them rather than > like Leni Riefenstahl. > > -Patrick >