When Ken and Helene Orce purchased their Edgemont house 33 years in the past, they didn’t understand it held a hidden piece of Holocaust historical past.
“When we found it, we were in awe. We knew we had to do something with it,” Helene stated.
They contacted Ruth Epstein, the spouse of Dr. William Epstein, who had lived in the home, solely to listen to that she didn’t need the drawings again.
“We were a little bit stunned,” she stated. “Whatever was left, was left.”
Drawn within the two weeks following the liberation of the Langenstein-Zwieberge focus camp, the sketches depict scenes of violence, pressured labor and every day life contained in the camp. Photograph courtesy of Manhattan College
The drawings, executed within the two weeks following the liberation of the Langenstein-Zwieberge focus camp by American troops, had been given to a U.S. Military Captain William Epstein, who went on to attend Cornell College Medical College.
The Orce’s ended up donating the art work to Ken’s alma mater, Manhattan College, a Catholic College in Riverdale. They’re now on show at Manhattan College’s O’Malley Library Gallery.
“The drawings represent an important form of primary source documentation, and they will now serve the very purpose for which Roux created them,” stated Professor Mehnaz M. Afridi, director of the college’s Holocaust, Genocide and Interfaith Training Middle.
“To ensure that the suffering and crimes of the Holocaust, and the stories of its survivors, are remembered and documented for future generations.”
Afridi described the photographs, on show together with panels explaining the pictures and the way that they had been discovered, as an account of life within the camp.
“We know he wanted to tell his story at least in terms of these sketches,” she stated. “These sketches have never been seen in public before. You see the sequence of what happened to the victims. This is a visual representation. It also shows that non-Jews could risk their lives.”
Helene additionally believes the pictures had been executed to offer a type of document, transcending language, by a French resistance fighter given to an American.
Created by French resistance fighter and survivor Marcel Rauch, the drawings got to a U.S. Military captain earlier than being tucked away for many years in an Edgemont house. Photograph courtesy of Manhattan College
“I think it was to preserve history,” she stated. “What could he do while he was there? This way he had some artwork. You could get a feeling of what was going on.”
The Orce’s stored the drawings for many years, periodically taking a look at them after which returning them to a type of limbo.
“We had them here for 30 years,” Helene stated. “We would show them to people. They would say you’ve got to sell them. We were very much against selling them.”
The Orce’s tried to donate the drawings by a French resistance fighter, who wasn’t Jewish, to Holocaust organizations who didn’t point out the intention of sustaining an exhibit.
“The answer was they’d be happy to take them, but would not display them,” Helene stated. “They already had too much in their archives.”
Ken graduated from Manhattan College, as soon as he contacted Tom Mauriello at Manhattan College, he stated they might like to get the drawings.
“I am so happy that they have a home now,” he stated. “And that people will be able to see them and see this part of history.”
Afridi stated the phrase ‘Kuenstmahler’ or artist, however not skilled, was on Roux’s id card together with a crimson triangle, which stands for resistance.
The Orce’s noticed Manhattan College’s Holocaust heart, which already additional investigated the drawings’ origins, as a great house.
“Manhattan College is in our hearts forever. When he was a sophomore in Manhattan, his father died of a massive heart attack,” Helene stated. “He withdrew from Manhattan. Two days later, he got a call from Manhattan saying they would provide a full scholarship.”
Now on show at Manhattan College, the works function a uncommon main document of the Holocaust, preserving the fact of what victims endured. Photograph courtesy of Manhattan College
Afridi stated Roux was born in 1904, did the drawings in 1945 and died in 1982. “He was not a known artist,” she stated. “He was somebody who was very talented.”
They discovered Roux was a French resistance fighter who alongside together with his spouse fought towards fascism. She was despatched to Ravensbrook, the place she was killed. He spent three years in Sachsenhausen and time in Buchenwald in early 1945 earlier than being moved to Langenstein-Zwieberge.
“The French resistance movement from 1940 to 1945 was huge,” Afridi stated. “It had in its membership not only Jews, but Protestants, Catholics, Muslims and others.”
The drawings present weapons pointed at inmates and different scenes from the dwelling hell of a Nazi labor and focus camp.
Afridi stated she “created an exhibit,” as a result of she doesn’t like issues to be simply sitting in a field.
“We are located in the Bronx, but also in Riverdale,” Afridi added. “Many Holocaust survivors went there after World War II.”
Manhattan College created its Holocaust assets heart to serve the neighborhood and inform an vital story.






