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(en) France, Monde Libertaire - History Pages No. 103 The Ghosts of Freita Street (ca, de, fr, it, pt, tr)[machine translation]

Date Sun, 28 Dec 2025 08:29:23 +0200


Jérémie Dres continues his quest for memory and history. After his graphic novel, We Won't Go to Auschwitz, which traces Jewish life in Poland before World War II, he offers a new investigation into his family history, focusing on his relatives who lived in Warsaw. To be honest, the narrative, while brisk, often drags and could have been more concise and impactful. The classical drawing style combines rounded forms, partially breaking with the clear line style, and simplified character designs, supplemented by numerous archival documents. After his grandmother's death, he finds a letter from his great-aunt, written from the Warsaw Ghetto in 1941, which marks the beginning of his investigation. He begins his investigation in Warsaw, where the graves of his great-grandparents, who died before the war, are located in the Jewish cemetery. He extends his research to all members of his family. Some left Europe for the United States, like his uncle, who, according to legend, participated in the Revolution before going into exile there. He finds traces of him and then his descendants. Others, like his grandmother, came to France and were able to escape extermination by going into hiding. The author travels extensively and explores various locations. He visits Warsaw several times, the Holocaust Memorial in Paris and Drancy, and Yad Vashem in New York. This search for memory also provides an opportunity to weave in episodes from Jewish history. Thus, the second visit to Warsaw allowed for the creation of a few illustrations depicting life in the ghetto and for the 1943 uprising to be discussed. Similarly, the meeting with those in charge of the Holocaust Memorial provided an opportunity to recall how the roundups were organized and the role of the police. The evidence remains tenuous, and the investigation cannot be fully concluded. The author is left with his ghosts.

The account of the investigation is moving. A parallel with Bastien François's book, *Retrouver Estelle Moufflarge*, is worth drawing. The authors embark on a search without knowing if it will be successful and ultimately conclude that all the elements could not be gathered. They publish without concluding, a kind of ongoing search, focusing on individual destinies, traces of memory that, however moving, respond more to personal concerns in which the authors place themselves, like a testimony that raises questions about our time rather than about the reconstruction of the past.

* Jérémie Dres
The Ghosts of Freita Street
Bayard Graphic 2025 382 p. EUR29.95

https://monde-libertaire.net/?articlen=8701
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