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Thou Shalt Not Kill, diptych,
1970
Oil on canvas
122x162 cm. each
Collection of the Yad Vashem Art
Museum, Jerusalem
Gift of the artist |
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The Summit, 1976
Oil on paper
60x49 cm.
Collection of the artist |
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Thou shalt not kill
Israel, New York, Paris, Lausanne, Boston 1970-1999
The sixth of the Ten Commandments given the Israelites on Mt. Sinai –
“Thou shalt not kill” – has repeatedly been violated in human history,
yet never as systematically or as cold-bloodedly as against the Jews
in the Holocaust. In face of the genocide of the Jewish people, artist
Samuel Bak ponders not only man’s wickedness and the injustice of
murdering the innocent, but he also grapples with another fundamental
query – God’s silence despite the commitment of the Covenant.
This question continued to distress the artist over the years, and, as
a result, Mt. Sinai, in all its symbolism, appears in many works,
especially of the 1970s. Unmistakably, the event does not inhere in
the European landscape; the Jewish People had their beginnings in the
desert vistas abutting the Land of Israel.
In 1999, Bak returned briefly to the subject of Mt. Sinai, but now
with a new and interesting approach. This Mt. Sinai depicts neither
tablets nor graves – it depicts the figure of a child, his arms raised
in surrender, the child with arms uplifted as if they were nailed to a
cross. This is the well-known icon of the Warsaw ghetto boy murdered
in the death camp of Treblinka. Complete identification with him
causes Bak to wonder about his own better fate, the fact that he,
Samek Bak, survived. The child, Bak, continues to wonder when he will
make up with the Creator, when he will hear an Apology, and when he
will cease to doubt the Covenant.
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