KIM LAWTON: The exhibit was the dream of Polish-Jewish actress Golda Tencer. Tencer created the Shalom Foundation in Warsaw to preserve the once thriving Jewish life and culture in Poland. In 1994, she sent out an appeal on Polish media for people to send in photographs and memorabilia of Jewish families prior to the war.Her friend, Rivka Ostaszewski, a child of Holocaust survivors, explains what happened next.
RIVKA OSTASZEWSKI: And people were laughing at her and saying, "Come on, I mean, it's so many years after the war. Nothing will be there." Well, surprisingly enough, there are over 9,000 photos and items sent into the Shalom Foundation, most of them sent by Poles who were neighbors or friends or just people that found something and held onto it, hoping that somebody would come back.LAWTON: These photos were not taken by professionals. They were from family albums found in attics and basements -- some even hidden in walls. They provide a diverse glimpse of everyday Jewish life in Poland, from the urban cities of Warsaw, Lodz, and Krakow to the rural life of the villages or shtetls.
They show many families, some of those celebrating Jewish holidays or enjoying a beach vacation. There are photos of Orthodox rabbis and boys learning in a yeshiva. And there are many touching images of children.
A 14-year-old girl in Auschwitz saved this tiny photograph of her mother.
The exhibition also has personal ties for Rivka -- a photo of her parents who escaped to Russia. Before they left, Rivka's mother pleaded with her father to join them.Ms. OSTASZEWSKI: And my grandfather said, "No, I am not going. Don't worry, daughter. You know, I lived through the first war, and I actually did business with the Germans. We'll survive this one, too." I mean, they had no idea.



Ms. OSTASZEWSKI: This is their memorial. The exhibit and the album, for me, and I suppose many people here, represents the memorial of those people, because there is not a grave that we can go to. There is nothing else left of that family that we know of.
Ms. OSTASZEWSKI: Most and foremost is to remember -- to remember and never let it be forgotten and never let it happen again.