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Onderduiker: Hiding in Amsterdam's ARTIS Zoo During WWII

This is the harrowing story of the Jews, resistance fighters, and young men escaping forced labor, who owed their lives to the staff at the ARTIS
Amsterdam Royal Zoo during WWII. Using infrared photography and lyrical poetry, Berger explores the psychological landscapes of the individuals who lived in constant fear, not knowing from day to day whether their hiding places might be revealed. Nazi soldiers loved the zoo and visited daily, not realizing that a wall away people were in hiding. Images and text chronical the struggles of ordinary people caught in extraordinary circumstances as they spend time with their memories, take flight with imagination, and experience longing, grief and at times terror.

Located near the Jewish neighborhood of the Jodenbuurt, ARTIS served as a hiding place for two to three hundred men, women and children, all of whom survived during their time in hiding. The zoo stayed open throughout the war, and Onderduikers spent months, even years hidden behind the scenes of animal enclosures in kitchens, attics and stables. All this took place within the beautiful grounds of the zoo. This setting, with its peaceful paths, sculpture gardens, and inventive architecture that served as hiding places, provides the stage for telling the Onderduiker’s stories.

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