(JEWISH GROUP) Created in hiding during WWII, a Jewish artist's underground zines are finally rising to the surface
What do you do when you finally admit to yourself that youve had something akin to Anne Franks diary in your living room for your entire life?
Simone Bloch mostly ignored it. The four bound volumes were like all the other antiques in the Queens home furnished by her parents, who traveled to Europe on buying trips for their Midtown store, Continental Antiques nothing to see there. Occasionally, her father pulled one of the old-timey looking books down from a shelf and read a poem aloud. In German. WTF?
Heres WTF: Simones father, Curt Bloch, a wicked satirist, wrote those poems. He also wrote songs and essays and wartime updates. Hundreds of them. He made collages of Nazis Hitler, Göring, Goebbels, all the biggies depicting them as babies, animals, buffoons. He somehow managed to corral all of this into 96 postcard-sized magazines while hiding from the Germans and their Dutch collaborators in an attic crawl space in Enschede, Holland, from August, 1943 to April, 1945. He produced them at a pace of one per week.
To be clear: Curt didnt print his magazines; how could he? There was, and still is, a single copy of each which circulated among 30 or so of the Jews hiding in Enschede. Het Onderwater Cabaret, or The Underwater Cabaret, was Curts answer to the untenable situation he, his family, and the rest of Europes Jews had found themselves in. The title is a play on the Dutch expression for hidden Jews: Onderduikers.
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