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The Posthumous Landscape
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21 October 2025

In 1992 Canadian documentary filmmaker and photographer David Kaufman travelled to Poland to produce a television program about hidden child survivors of the Holocaust. A decade later, he returned to make films about the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising and the Łódź Ghetto. Kaufman was deeply moved by the quality of Jewish material culture—the physical remnants of Jewish life—that he saw on these early visits. In 2007 he set out on the first of many trips over two decades to record images of tenements, factories, synagogues, and cemeteries that were part of everyday Jewish life in pre-Holocaust eastern Europe. He also made photos of some of the places of despair and death where Jews were killed during the war.
The Posthumous Landscape is more than an act of preserving memory. Kaufman brings his decades of documentary storytelling experience to bear, illuminating these places left behind. His photographs and accompanying texts describe a historic community that played a major role in the development of eastern European society and which left behind grand industrial complexes, urban neighbourhoods, architectural landmarks, beautiful synagogues, as well as vast cemeteries, and haunting memorials. The photographs also tell the stories of the afterlives of those places, many repurposed, some lovingly cared for by non-Jews who remember, and others slowly returning to the earth, but which are preserved in this book’s pages.
Some readers will find here names from their own family histories. All will discover a visual landscape that bears witness to the vitality and creativity of Eastern European Jewry before its destruction.
With introductory essays by political commentator Bernard Avishai and Polish journalist and heritage activist Joanna Podolska, The Posthumous Landscape is a tribute to a community that met a tragic end and a testament to how our internal landscapes are inextricably bound to the places of our past.
PHOTOGRAPHY / Photojournalism, Photojournalism and documentary photography, PHOTOGRAPHY / Individual Photographers / Monographs, HISTORY / Jewish, HISTORY / Europe / Poland, HISTORY / Modern / 20th Century / Holocaust, TRAVEL / Special Interest / Religious, Individual photographers, Social & cultural history, European history, The Holocaust
—Harold Troper, historian, professor emeritus, University of Toronto
“A luminous silence radiates from these pristine photographs. They record at this precise moment what can and cannot be recovered from a world destroyed with the disappearance of those who created it. An inspiring volume that invites the reader to follow in the photographer’s footsteps.”
—Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, Ronald S. Lauder Chief Curator, Core Exhibition at the POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews
“The Posthumous Landscape will be deeply meaningful to any person with a personal tie to, or interest in, the civilization that was created by Eastern European Jewry. As someone whose parents grew up in and survived the entire war in Poland/Ukraine, and who has researched issues related to the Holocaust, this book has spoken to me like no other.”
—Morton Weinfeld, Professor of Sociology, McGill University, co-author with John Sigal of Trauma and Rebirth: Intergenerational Effects of the Holocaust
"These photographs share thoughts of deeper seclusion, connecting landscape with the quiet of the sky, lonely rooms restored in a tranquility that sees into the life of things. Kaufman’s monumental kaddish belongs on the coffee table alongside Roman Vishniac’s A Vanished World and Frédéric Brenner’s Diaspora."
—The Seaboard Review
Photographic Eulogies
Bernard Avishai
Photographing the Posthumous Landscape
David Kaufman
In the Polish Landscape
Joanna Podolska
Photographs: Poland
Photographs: Western Ukraine
Photographs: Lithuania and Latvia
Acknowledgments
A Note on Sources