“A Human Ecology”
A Review of Of Animals and Men by Nick Olszyk
Distribution Service: Theatrical (Fathom Events)
Year: 2021
MPAA Rating, Not rated at the time of this review
USCCB Rating, Not rated at the time of this review
Reel Rating, Three Reels
There
are many stories of heroic virtue that have come from the Holocaust but few as
compelling and charming as that of zookeepers Jan and Antonia Zabinski. Their
story has been told many times, most recently in The
Zookeeper’s Wife (2017) but never from their own experiences. Of
Animals and Men puts a real witness to the story, especially from their daughter
Teresa, who was in elementary school at the time and just passed away this February.
It a potent reminder that even the most ordinary people can perform acts of great
bravery, and this is not long ago but yesterday and today.
Jan
Zabinski was a Polish biologist with a dream: to put a world class zoo in the
heart of his beloved Poland. In the 1928, that vision became reality with the
establishment of the Warsaw Zoological Garden. For Jan, being the zoo’s
director was not just a career but an integral part of his vocation. His wife and
two children (Therese and Ryszard) lived in a large house in the center of the
complex. Baby tigers, lions, possums, and other animals that needed extra care
would live and even sleep in the house. Jan became known internationally and
would often attend meetings with other directors in London, Paris, Rome, or New
York. This idyllic time ended in 1939 when Nazi Germany invaded Poland. In the
bombing of Warsaw, large sections of the architecture were destroyed and, worst
still, many of the animals were killed. Those that survived were carted off to the
Berlin Zoo, leaving the campus eerily empty.
Initially,
Jan’s main concern was keeping the zoo, and his family, from falling into ruin.
He started raising pigs in enclosures originally meant for chimpanzees or eagles.
He developed a friendship with Dr. Lutz Heck, Hitler’s chief zoologist, who was
obsessed with recreating the ancient aurochs of Europe’s past through
selective breeding. He also cultivated a relationship with Szymon Tenenbaum, an
entomologist living in the ghetto. Through these contacts, he was able to move
freely between the Aryan and Jewish sections of the city and began to smuggle
people into the zoo. Jewish refugees would live quietly amongst the pigs and
pheasants for days or even months before obtaining fake visas to escape the county.
By the war’s end, Jan and Ana had secretly assisted over 200 people. In 1965,
he was declared a “Righteous among the Nations” and planted a tree in Yad
Vashem.
With
the advent of smartphones in 2007, even the most mundane and trivial moments of
one’s life can be preserved for eternity. In the 1930s, home movies were
essential non-existent. Yet a zoo director is not only a scientist but an
entertainer, and Jan would sometimes focus his 8mm camera on his family. This
results in some truly remarkable footage. How many people in their 80s have home
movies of their toddler years, and how many of those show an otter and a two-year-old
sleeping in a crib together? It easy to image people like Oscar Schindler and Corrie
ten Boom as otherworldly figures whose courage is unattainable for the masses. Yet
these images show a family with all the joys and sorrows of our own. They also visualize
the horror of that time, including Nazi officers going for a leisurely stroll
of the grounds and an mutilated elephant carcass, dead from an ariel bomb. The
narration over these films is mostly done by Teresa but also Jewish children
Jan saved, now in their twilight years. The narrative rarely strays from this
format, which can seem unsophisticated in comparison to most recent documentaries,
but the brutal reality of the images and memories is incredibly effective.
Throughout
Of Animals and Men, I was constantly reminded of Laudato Si,
which, in my modest opinion, is the best thing Pope Francis has yet written. In
this encyclical, the Holy Father speaks of the need for a “human ecology,” which
positions care of creation as important due to its affect on human needs. Conservation
and environmentalism, properly understood, is not against man but for him.
Without a theology degree, the Zabinskis understood this in a profound way. Jan
envisioned his zoo as spiritual education not just a Saturday distraction. Yet when
the needs of his fellows were apparent, he set aside his aspirations to help
them. There’s something beautiful about how these enclosures, meant to serve
the needs of lions ended up preserving the survival of men.
After
the war, Jan was able to rebuild the zoo but retired early in 1953 after
growing frustrated with the Communist authorities. The Warsaw Zoological Garden
is still open to this day, and, even
greater, the descendants of the Jews he helped number in the thousands. If the
lion can lie down with the lamb, then certainly the man can as well.
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