The photograph dates from some time between mid-1941, when the Germans occupied the oblast (region) of Vinnytsia, and 1943.[2] During this period there were numerous massacres of Jews in the oblast,[3] including in the town itself on 16 and 22 September 1941 and April 1942, after which those spared were sent to labour camps and Yerusalimka, Vinnitsa's Jewish quarter, was largely razed.[2][4][5] The Germans' summer uniforms mean the photograph is unlikely to have been taken in winter.[6]
The photograph was circulated in 1961 by United Press (UPI) during the trial of Adolf Eichmann.[7] UPI had received it from Al Moss (b. 1910), a Polish Jew who acquired it in May 1945 shortly after he was liberated from Allach concentration camp by the American 3rd Army.[7][8] Moss, living in Chicago in 1961, wanted people "to know what went on in Eichmann's time".[7] The UPI copy was published over a full page of The Forward.[9]
Later sources give sometimes contradictory details of the picture. Some say that the original physical image was in an Einsatzgruppe member's photograph album, or removed from the pocket of a dead soldier;[10] and that written on its reverse side was "Last Jew in Vinnitsa",[11] now widely used as the image's name.[7][11][10][12] Several people have contacted Die Welt, each purporting to identify the shooter as a relative.[6]
In January 2024, German newspaper Die Welt published a work by Jürgen Matthäus that concluded the picture was taken on 28 July 1941 at the citadel of Berdychiv. A photograph reproduced from the same negative had the description "Late July 1941. Execution of Jews by SS in the Berditschew citadel" while a second photograph of the possibly same event mentions Berdychiv as well.[13][14]
The photograph was used on the cover of Agnostic Front's 1984 album Victim in Pain, liable to be interpreted as part of the Nazi chic then current in the New York hardcore scene.[12]Roger Miret later said his thinking had been "this needs to be publicized in order to prevent history from repeating itself."[25]
^Ouzan, Francoise S.; Mikhman, Dan (2008). "La mémoire de la Shoah dans le vécu des Juifs aux Etats-Unis jusqu'au procès Eichmann". De la mémoire de la Shoah dans le monde juif (in French). CNRS éditions. p. 306. ISBN9782271067630.
^Matthäus, Jürgen (Winter 2023). "'The last Jew in Vinnitsa': Reframing an Iconic Holocaust Photograph". Holocaust and Genocide Studies. 37 (3): 349–359. doi:10.1093/hgs/dcad053.
^Boehlke, Erik (2016-10-10). "Geheime Botschaften in Bildern; 5 Entdeckungen bei genauem Hinsehen". In Sollberger, Daniel; Böning, Jobst; Boehlke, Erik; Schindler, Gerhard (eds.). Das Geheimnis: Psychologische, psychopathologische und künstlerische Ausdrucksformen im Spektrum zwischen Verheimlichen und Geheimnisvollem (in German). Frank & Timme. pp. 238–239. ISBN9783732903016. Retrieved 5 April 2018.
^Berenbaum, Michael (1993). The World Must Know: The History of the Holocaust as Told in the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Little, Brown. ISBN9780316091343.
^ ab"Memorials to the Murdered Jews of Vinnytsya". Information Portal to European Sites of Remembrance (in English and German). Berlin: Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe. Tab "Victims". Retrieved 5 April 2018.