Posts Tagged ‘Lieselotte Jakob’

Lieselotte Jakob

Sunday, February 9th, 2020

“It was the most saddening experience of my life.”

-Lieselotte Jakob

On February 13th, 1945 the baroque city of Dresden, Germany was firebombed into cinder by the British Royal Air Force and the United States Army Air Force. The attack was divided into three bombing raids dropping over 4,500 tons of high explosives, including incendiary bombs, onto the city known as “Florence on the Elbe.”

Lieselotte Jakob, 24, and her family survived the bombardment by sheltering in their cellar. A bomb detonated directly in their street and the explosion ripped through the neighborhood. The cellar housing Lieselotte and her family was the only one to contain survivors.

After fleeing the cellar, the family headed towards the hospital in the direction of the Elbe River. They attempted to get into another shelter but no one would open their doors to allow them to get safety from the bombs and fire so they walked towards City Hall.

The family walked along the river and saw corpses leaning against walls. Their lungs had collapsed. They arrived at the hospital to find it full of chaos and disorder. Lieselotte suffered from smoke inhalation. She couldn’t speak for 4 weeks.

After the bombings she lived with her grandparents in Dresden. One of her relatives was a solider assigned to cremating bodies in the town square.

Soon afterwards, Lieselotte made her way towards her parent’s farm, situated to the east of Dresden. The journey was long and arduous, but the area was lost to the Red Army, forcing Lieselotte to turn back towards the city. They walked back to Dresden by following in the tracks of other fleeing refugees. Along the way they were twice shot at by planes.

This portrait is a part of my From Above project which featured portraits of atomic bomb and firebombing survivors from WWII. My limited edition book is available at https://www.photoeye.com/bookstore/citation.cfm…

A selection of From Above portraits, including portraits of firebombing survivors from Coventry and Rotterdam, will be exhibited in the Dresden Neustadt during May. Further information will be released closer to the opening.

Nagasaki…to Dresden…to Leipzig…..

Wednesday, December 31st, 2014

..December 2014.. ..Nagasaki, Dresden, Leipzig..

Sadly, 2014 saw the passing of three people who I photographed for From Above and the Berlin Wall project.

Mrs. Hiroshi Matsuzoe, Mrs. Lieselotte Jakob and Pastor Christian Führer were some of the most memorable people who I have ever photographed. I have a great deal of respect for what they have endured and stood for later in their lives. I never understood why they thanked me so much for being interested in their lives because they naturally seemed like extraordinary people to me. They lived every moment demonstrating that peace begins with your actions then it can be spread exponentially.

I never had doubts about what they fought for. I need to thank them because they had more trust in me at times than I had in myself. I hope that my photographs will continue to carry on their message even though their voices have gone silent.

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Mr. Matsuzoe was one the first hibakusha, atomic bomb survivor, I photographed and interviewed for From Above. He was 14 years old when the atomic bomb detonated over Nagasaki.

Mr. Matsuzoe dedicated his life to informing students about the importance of abolishing nuclear weapons. Last year he lost his voice to cancer but still spread his message when doctor’s restored his voice by installing an electronic device in his voice box.

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Mrs. Lieselotte Jakob was one of the oldest survivors of the Dresden firebombings that I photographed. She lived in Dresden all her life and each year she attended the commemoration ceremonies to make sure the survivors message of peace and reconciliation weren’t not drowned out by the misguided ideology of vengeance. Mrs. Jakob is a testament that the softest voices can have a lasting impression over the sophomoric who are shouting.

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Pastor Christian Führer was the organizer of the Monday Demonstrations at the Nikolakirche in Leipzig, East Germany. During the autumn of 1989, the demonstrations were a catalyst for the fall of the socialist East German regime which ruled since the end of WWII.

Pastor Führer galvanized millions of people to speak out for greater civil liberties in a country where dissent and criticism of the “system” was not tolerated. What started out as a movement consisting of a handful of people swept through an entire population over the course of a decade. He is an example of the power one person’s actions can have, not only on a country, but history. He was one of the most under appreciated figures, who I consider a real person (not some bureaucratic or politician), who brought a crashing end to the Cold War. Even thought I don’t believe he is given enough credit for his role in history, Pastor Führer’s modesty wouldn’t permit it. He probably saw what he contributed to as his responsibility to society.

Mrs. Lieselotte Jakob

Wednesday, December 10th, 2014

..December 2014.. ..New York..

I received the sad news that Mrs. Lieselotte Jakob passed away earlier this year. Mrs. Jakob was one of the Dresden fire bombing survivors I photographed during my first trip to Dresden.

When I returned to Dresden with the From Above exhibition in 2011 she told me that the venue, where the exhibition was held in, was one of the places she and her family had slept in the night after the destruction of Dresden on February 13th, 1945.

I consider myself lucky to have spent time with Mrs. Jakob. She is missed. It was an honor to have known her.

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Ceremony at the Dresden Altmarkt

Friday, February 14th, 2014

1/1/11

Monday, January 3rd, 2011