Martin Gray (born Mieczysław Grajewski; 27 April 1922 – 24 April 2016) was a
Holocaust survivor who emigrated to the West, and published books in
French
French (french: français(e), link=no) may refer to:
* Something of, from, or related to France
** French language, which originated in France, and its various dialects and accents
** French people, a nation and ethnic group identified with Franc ...
about his experiences during World War II, in which his family was killed in Poland.
Life
Born in
Warsaw,
Second Polish Republic
The Second Polish Republic, at the time officially known as the Republic of Poland, was a country in Central Europe, Central and Eastern Europe that existed between 1918 and 1939. The state was established on 6 November 1918, before the end of ...
, the son of Henry/Henoch and Ida
eld Grajewski (Gray) was 17 years old when Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union
invaded Poland; they resided at 23 Mila Street Warsaw. His mother and brothers Isaac and Yacob died in
Treblinka extermination camp; his father was killed in the
Warsaw Ghetto Uprising of 1943. He wrote later that he escaped from the
Treblinka extermination camp during the most deadly phase of the Holocaust. He joined the Red Army during the Soviet counter-offensive and became an officer of the
NKVD secret police in August 1944. Grajewski (pseudonym "Zamojski") was tasked with breaking up Polish anti-communist underground in the area of
Zambrów. By his own admission, Gray slept at the local NKVD headquarters with a pistol in his hand for security.
Grajewski emigrated in 1946 from Europe to the
United States, where his grandmother was living. A decade after his arrival Gray had become a tradesman in replicas of antiques according to what he wrote, doing business in the U.S.,
Canada and
Cuba. He moved to the
South of France in 1960.
Gray moved to Belgium in 2001. On 24 April 2016, three days before his 94th birthday, he was found dead in his swimming pool at his home in
Ciney, Belgium, where he had lived since 2012.
Im Alter von 93 Jahren: Schriftsteller Martin Gray ist tot
wort.lu; accessed 1 August 2018.
Writings
Gray's first book, ''For Those I Loved'' (''Au nom de tous les miens''), became a bestseller. Another 11 books would follow over the years. All of Gray's books have been written in French. Several of them have been translated into English. Gray's last book ''Au nom de tous les hommes'' (2005) has not yet been translated into English.
Two of Gray's books are autobiographies: ''For Those I Loved'' covers the era from his birth in 1922 to 1970, when Gray lost his wife and his four children in a forest fire. His second autobiography, ''La vie renaitra de la nuit,'' (''Life Arises Out of Darkness'') covers 1970-77, during which Gray found his second wife, Virginia. In this second autobiography he describes desperately looking for a way to live after the demise of his family in the 1970 fire. In 1979, U.S. photographer David Douglas Duncan
David Douglas Duncan (January 23, 1916 – June 7, 2018) was an American photojournalist, known for his dramatic combat photographs, as well as for his extensive domestic photography of Pablo Picasso and his wife Jacqueline.
Childhood and educ ...
produced a book of photographs and text about Gray: ''The Fragile Miracle of Martin Gray''.
Criticism
Holocaust historian Gitta Sereny dismissed Gray's book as a forgery in a 1979 article in '' New Statesman'' magazine, writing that "Gray's '' For Those I Loved'' was the work of Max Gallo the ghostwriter: "During the research for a Sunday Times
''The Sunday Times'' is a British newspaper whose circulation makes it the largest in Britain's quality press market category. It was founded in 1821 as ''The New Observer''. It is published by Times Newspapers Ltd, a subsidiary of News UK, whi ...
inquiry into Gray's work, M. Gallo informed me coolly that he 'needed' a long chapter on Treblinka because the book required something strong for pulling in readers. When I myself told Gray, the 'author', that he had manifestly never been to, nor escaped from Treblinka, he finally asked, despairingly, 'But does it matter? Wasn't the only thing that Treblinka did happen, that it should be written about, and that some Jews should be shown to have been heroic?'"[Sereny, Gitta. "The Men Who Whitewash Hitler" '' New Statesman'', Vol. 98, No. 2537, 2 November 1979, pp. 670-73.] Pierre Vidal-Naquet, a French historian who first followed the idea of Gitta Sereny, has been persuaded by certificates provided by Martin Gray and withdrew his accusations against him. Nevertheless, he continued to blame Max Gallo for taking liberties with the truth.
The Polish daily newspaper ''Nowiny Rzeszowskie'' (''Rzeszów News'') on 2 August 1990 published an interview with World War II Captain Wacław Kopisto, a soldier of the elite Polish Cichociemni unit, who took part in the raid on the Nazi German prison in Pińsk on 18 January 1943. Kopisto was shown the wartime photograph of Martin Gray (a.k.a. Mieczysław Grajewski) and said he had never seen Grajewski/Gray before in his life. Gray described his alleged participation in the same raid in his book ''For Those I Loved''.
Kopisto stated, when asked about ''any'' Jew in his unit alluding to Gray, that among the sixteen Polish soldiers in his partisan group there was a Polish Jew from Warsaw by the name of Zygmunt Sulima, his own long-term friend and colleague after the war. No man like the one in the photograph of Gray ever belonged to their unit; Kopisto said: "For the first time in my life I saw Martin Gray in a 1945 photo, which was published in March 1990 in Przekrój magazine ..There were only sixteen of us participating in the 1943 Pińsk raid, and he was not among us."[Jacek Stachiewicz interview with Major Wacław Kopisto (2 August 1990), "Kim jest Martin Gray?" (Who is Martin Gray) ''Nowiny Rzeszowskie'' (''The Rzeszów News'' daily), Nr 163, 1990, p. 9 of scanned document, Scribd Inc. ''Also at:'' Polish daily ''Nowiny Rzeszowskie'']
DJVU Lizardtech viewer. Nr 162-83.
Pbc.rzeszow.pl, ''Podkarpacka'' Digital Library.
Selected publications
* ''Au nom de tous les miens'', 1972. Available in English as ''For Those I Loved'',
* ''Les pensees de notre vie.'', 1976.
* ''J'écris aux hommes de demain'', 1984.
* ''La maison humaine'', 1985.
* ''Le nouveau livre'', 1988.
* ''Martin Gray parle de la vie'', 1989.
* ''Entre la haine et l'amour'', 1992.
* ''Vivre debout : comment faire face dans un monde en crise'', 1997.
* ''La prière de l'enfant'', 1998.
* ''La vie renaîtra de la nuit'', 1977. Reissued in 2002.
* ''Au nom de tous les hommes : Caïn et Abel'', 2006.
* ''Les forces de la vie'', 2007.
In film
Gray's life has been put on film: '' For Those I Loved''. The film was broadcast as a mini-series during the 1980s in Europe, starring Michael York and Brigitte Fossey. *A second, shorter film was made by Frits Vrij, who tried to contact Gray for several years. The encounter between Gray and Vrij resulted in a film: ''Seeking Martin Gray''.
See also
* Misha Defonseca
Misha Defonseca (born Monique de Wael) is a Belgian-born impostor and the author of a fraudulent Holocaust memoir titled '' Misha: A Mémoire of the Holocaust Years'', first published in 1997 and at that time professed to be a true memoir. It beca ...
* Herman Rosenblat
* Binjamin Wilkomirski
''Fragments: Memories of a Wartime Childhood'' is a 1995 book, whose author used the pseudonym Binjamin Wilkomirski, which purports to be a memoir of the Holocaust. It was debunked by Swiss journalist and writer in August 1998. The subsequent di ...
* Rosemarie Pence
Rosemarie Pence (formerly Hannah Pence; born 1938) is a German-American woman who posed as a child Holocaust survivor from the Dachau Concentration Camp. Pence became the subject of a fake biography titled '' Hannah: From Dachau to the Olympics ...
* Enric Marco
Enric Marco (12 April 1921 – 21 May 2022) was a Catalonian impostor who claimed to have been a prisoner in Nazi German concentration camps Mauthausen and Flossenbürg in World War II. He was awarded the Creu de Sant Jordi by the Catalan ...
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Gray, Martin
1922 births
2016 deaths
Polish writers in French
Treblinka extermination camp survivors
Warsaw Ghetto inmates
Warsaw Ghetto Uprising insurgents
Jewish Combat Organization members
Jewish resistance members during the Holocaust
Sonderkommando
Polish emigrants to the United States
Polish expatriates in France
Polish expatriates in Belgium
Polish memoirists
Holocaust survivors