Helmbrechts Walk, 1998–2003

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A01=Susan Silas
All-women prisoners Holocaust victims
Alois Dorr trial Volary
American liberation of Volary Richard Long
Author_Susan Silas
Bavaria World War II survivor interviews
Category=AJ
Category=DNL
Category=NHTZ1
children of survivors Holocaust memorials
Czech Republic
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
fascist ideology and landscape secondary witnesses
forced march
forthcoming
German fascism
Halina Kleiner Brett Ashley Kaplan
Hamish Fulton
Helmbrechts
Helmbrechts Walk
Helmbrechts work camp Death march
Holocaust scholarship Landscape as witness
Jewish cemetery Volary
memorial testament Feminist Holocaust scholarship
Pracatice
Shoah victims Allied liberation of Volary
Sudetenland
World War II prisoners Flossenberg concentration camp Anti-Semitism Alois Dorr

Product details

  • ISBN 9781835953952
  • Dimensions: 215 x 300mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Sep 2026
  • Publisher: Intellect
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Helmbrechts Walk, 1998-2003 is a memorial testament to the forced march of 580 female Jewish prisoners at the end of the Second World War. The march began on April 13th, 1945 in order to evacuate Helmbrechts, a small satellite camp of the Flossenbürg concentration camp.

This work is a visual representation of the 225 miles that the prisoners were forced to march from the camp in Germany into the occupied portion of Czechoslovakia, then known as the Sudetenland. Susan Silas set out to retrace the path of these women—22 days in Germany and the Czech Republic, on the 53rd anniversary of the march. Silas documented this journey on video, in still images and in writings, including this book, which contains 48 archival color plates.

The images are contextualized by a diary of the author's own experiences juxtaposed with news clips drawn from the front pages of The New York Times on the same days in 1998—thus drawing a connection between the violent events of the past and those being witnessed in the present.

In addition to the originally unbound artwork, this book includes a survivor interview with Halina Kleiner, a preface by the Holocaust scholar Brett Ashley Kaplan, and a remembrance of the women who died during this march.

Susan Silas is an artist working in photography, video and sculpture. She is interested in the way historical forces intersect the personal and in how identity is formed. Susan Silas is a dual Hungarian and American national living and working in Brooklyn, New York, USA.

 

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