ENTER: The Menorah of Fang Bang Lu online documentary
Writer/ Producer: Andrew Jakubowicz is Professor of Sociology at the
University of Technology Sydney; his parents arrived in Australia via
Shanghai in 1946 most of their families had perished in the Holocaust.
He now works in the area of multicultural affairs, and was the executive
producer of Making Multicultural Australia a multimedia documentary
(1999).
Creative Director: Tatiana Pentes, a digital producer who created BLACKBOX music/dance documentary and the AIMIA award winner (2000) Strange Cities, an interactive digital media work built around memories of Shanghai in the 1930s and 1940s, and the music
of her grandfather, Shanghai jazz orchestra leader Sergei Ermolaeff (Serge
Ermoll), a Harbin born Manchurian Russian.
- Interface still: The Menorah of Fang Bang Lu online documentary
The Menorah of Fang Bang Lu reviewed by Keth Gallasch RealTime issue #46 Dec-Jan 2001.
Read online
VECTORS: Journal of Culture & Technology in a Dynamic Vernacular
Issue 1. Winter, 2005 http://vectors.usc.edu/projects/index.php?project=40
“What can a single artifact tell us about history? For an
archaeologist schooled in deciphering subtle traces, a lone relic can
speak volumes. So it is with the 19th century brass menorah at the
center of Andrew Jakubowicz’s The Menorah of Fang Bang Lu. Serving as a
metaphor for the intertwining stories of four Jewish families living in
Shanghai in the late 19th and early 20thcenturies, this object also
provides evidence of a community that has since disappeared from the
city, having joined the worldwide Jewish diaspora during World War II,
only to make their way to Australia. Their stories are told and this
history is pieced together through interviews with surviving family
members and collections of photographs, documents and testimonies that
describe a strikingly similar set of experiences. Jakubowicz’s
exhaustively documented site offers a model for constructing a
multi-perspectival portrait of a moment from the past that cannot be
otherwise reconstituted. The family stories that constellate around the
image of the menorah describe a set of common themes emerging from
individual experiences with immigration, community and participation in
an economic system. At the same time, the stories remain separate and
distinct, a subtle evocation of the fact that none of the families knew
each other when living in Shanghai; it is only through this
reconstruction after the fact that their lives have been woven into a
larger historical narrative. As a piece of historical evidence whose
origins can only be conjectured, the menorah also functions as a
metaphor for Jakubowicz’s investigation. The graceful folk tune that
emanates from the music box in the base of the menorah is at once
familiar and indecipherable, some of the notes having been long since
worn away, but leaving enough of the tune intact to provide a suggestive
starting point for historical enquiry. Like the films of Hungarian
Peter Forgacs, who constructs historical narratives out of home movies
shot by WWII era European Jewish families, Jakubowicz’s work resonates
with traditions of oral history and history-from-below, implicitly
arguing that the stories of “ordinary” people should not be excluded
from the historical record.”
— Professor Tara McPherson and Steve Anderson, Division of Critical Studies, School of Cinematic Arts, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA
SYNOPSIS
“The Menorah of Fang Bang Lu is a brass menorah (a Jewish
religious candelabra), probably dating from the late nineteenth century.
It was found on a second hand stall in a Shanghai antique market, in
October 2000, more than forty years after the last Jews had left
Shanghai. In its base is a wind-up music box, playing out a tune that
has yet to be identified. Its simple chords evoke the many cultures of
Jewish China. The antique market stands near the main entrance gate to
Fang Bang Lu (or Fong Pang Road as it was known when there was a Jewish
community in Shanghai from the 1840s to the 1950s). Fang Bang Lu is the
main street in the old Chinese city (just south of the former French
Concession and International Settlement), and leads to a tea house the
original that has haunted western fantasies of China since the
eighteenth century.|
- Interface still: The Menorah of Fang Bang Lu online documentary
This computer based project explores the patterns that seven
Australian families to Shanghai, families whose paths crossed many
times, but who never met there. These four families will be joined by
three more over the coming months – their lives entered through the
flames of the Menorah. Through common themes of arrival, community,
economy, place, interactions with China and the Japanese occupiers, and
then the tenuous journeys to Australia, we begin to sense the
intertwining of serendipity and design that mark their pathways. From
the Moalems, key figures in the Sephardic (Babylonian/Spanish) religious
community, to the Krouks, active participants in the vibrant Russian
Jewish community, the Gunsbergers, surprising survivors of Kristallnacht
and an escape across Europe to Manchuria, to the Weyland Jakubowicz
family in their arduous struggle through the USSR and Japan, we begin to
understand the rich fabric of cultural heritage of these diasporic
people, who came at last as refugees to Australia. We discover the
stories of Leisl Rosner (Gerber), a girl from Vienna who became a woman
in Shanghai, Rachel Kofman, a Russian woman from Harbin who returned to
China from her studies in California, and settled in Shanghai, and the
Szekeres, mathematicians living in limbo on the edge of the world. The
arrival of all these families in Australia from 1946 was in
circumstances of hostility that are not overwhelmingly different from
those facing today’s refugees and tells us much about not only where
they came from but what they found in the new land.