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2/19/99 - Centerfold Minimized, Full Left Side Inserted
Arguably best screen view of picture, slight sepia tone.
- Large - 67K
- Medium - 45K
Notes, 2/19/99:
- The object to the right is certainly not a weapon, as guessed
earlier. Perhaps it is a small cart or wheelbarrow.
- At least one person appears to be standing in a hole, perhaps
removing a stone. If, as the Time-Life caption says, they are digging
agrave, where is the removed material? Why would they scatter it
about rather than piling it right next to the hole?
2/18/99 - Better Quality Copy
From Time-Life, WWII, 1967, with a slice missing in the centerfold
that will be added later. Corrects several misassumptions above:
Notes, 2/18/99:
- The group to the right is two or three men, some shovels and
an object I cannot identify. The Time-Life text says that they are
digging a grave for the woman.
- It now appears that the soldier was added, the woman, probably.
Again, note the absence of shadows on her face, neck and legs as
compared to the soldier.
More comments to follow.
- Full size, high quality
- 8.8 Meg
- Half size, med. quality
- 190K
- Quarter size, med.
quality
- Eighth size, med.
quality
2/14/99 - First Comments on the Photos
Notes, 2/14/99:
- The item on the far right may be a machine gun or small cannon
with fold-out shields. The person crouching appears to be a soldier.
- Note the shadow cast by the thin vertical item (shield from
end-on view), and then study the shadows on the other characters,
particularly the woman. Note that the back right side of her face
is not in deep shadow, as are the other two. Also, the crouching
man and the bundle next to him cast a proper shadow, but the woman
and the standing soldier cast none. The soldier might be standing
behind a raised ridge of earth, hiding his shadow, but no so the
woman. You can also see a light line denoting the bottom edge of
her sleeve, on a dark dress in shadow. The "raised ridge of earth"
could also be the marker line where the photo of the soldier was
superimposed on a larger picture.
- The woman's right heel projects back too far, and is solid black
as if it were a shadow. Note the white line around the heel of the
raised right foot.
- Lay a straight-edge along the rifle barrel and note that it
either misses entirely or barely intersects the top of her head.
If the rifleman had his sling on, you might be able to claim that
he's settling down into the shot, a normal aiming procedure. But
without the sling, the normal way of sighting is to raise into the
sight picture. The sling produces an over-tight brace that you must
lower your arm into for it to be effective, you have to move down
to pull against its force. With no sling, you're just lifting a
weight, and you have to pull up against the force. You would always
be opposing a retarding force on the gun barrel when moving into
a sight picture, not going with any force since that will encourage
over or under shooting.
- Compare the size of the soldier's head and the woman's. Hers
(and the crouching person's too) is 20% or more larger. She seems
to be standing closer to the camera than the soldier, but not that
much.
My take on this is that the woman was added to a photo that included
the items on the right and may or may not have included the soldier.
What is fairly certain, even it the whole thing is real, is that he's
not shooting at the woman and child.
David Thomas, 2/16/99
All the pictures are in JPEG or jpg format, 300 dpi, with quality
levels varying from 100% to 25% for "reduced quality." The original
scan was made on a German language brochure using blue ink and thin
paper, criticizing Goldhagen and Spielberg. The thin paper caused the
letters on the reverse side to appear in the sky and no attempt was
made to remove them on the first pass. All the pictures with "2" in
their address name have had these ghost letters removed. Don't attach
any significance to the shape of the horizon line on these, it just
reflects the hand-drawn selection of the area that was modified. Ditto
any fine distinctions of the profiles of the people in the sky area,
ignore the fine area close to them that has a slightly different texture
as that is left over from the modification.
Cropped and Uncropped Versions, with text, original blue:
- Full size, full quality,
blue - 2,798K
- Same as above,
gray scale - 2,300K
- Full size, reduced
quality, blue - 204K
- Same as above,
gray scale - 187K
- Half size, reduced
quality - 58K
Uncropped Version Only, gray-scale, text in sky removed:
- Full size, full quality
- 635K
- Full size, reduced quality
- 49K
- Half size, full
quality - 158K
- Half size, reduced
quality - 16K
Among the many books in which this photo has appeared:
- The Holocaust, Martin Gilbert, 1979, pp82-83 (Uncropped)
- Genocide: The Jews in Europe 1939-45, Ballantine (Cropped?)
- Hitler's Willing Executioners, D. Goldhagen (Cropped)
- Time-Life Books, WWII, The Nazis, 1967 (Uncropped)
- This Century, Peter Jennings and Todd Brewster, 1998,
p260 (Cropped)
A typical caption reads:
"A member of the Einsatzgruppen targets a mother and child
at point-blank range. Women were often ordered to hold their children
so that one bullet could do the work of two." - This Century
A Further Modified Version of the Cropped Picture
The cropped picture, as shown on page 260 of This Century
has shadows added to the rifleman and the woman, shadows that go the
wrong way, directly into the source of light clearly indicated by both
the uncropped version and also by features in the cropped photo to which
they were added. This explains the dark blobs that appear at the bottom
of the cropped version in the first listing above. With these shadows
added, the perspective is shifted so that now it appears even more as
if the soldier is aiming at the woman's head. Also, with the shadow
now around her feet it becomes even more obvious that the woman is not
standing on the ground because of the distinct white border at the bottom.
From the poor quality photocopy I have of the uncropped picture shown
in Gilbert's book, the shadows appear to be shown there as well. An
attempt will be made to access the book and scan in the photo from there.
"Shadows added" version
- 20K
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