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My lost cousin, killed by the Nazis for writing an opera

Petr Kien was a talented artist murdered in Auschwitz. Years later his cousin, Gloria Tessler went in search of his artworks

January 22, 2020 17:04
Petr Kien
3 min read

He was the ghost child who shadowed my childhood. Petr Kien was my mother’s cousin and playmate whose adventures in Varnsdorf, their Sudeten Czech home town, formed a rich canvas for her future bedtime stories. He would write poems about wolves and foxes, and see things invisible to anyone else. Together they would cross an imaginary river over a “bridge of lies” into which you would fall and drown if you told a lie, and your hand would stick up forever as a sign of your mendacity.

Petr, child artist and poet, was gifted enough to be given drawing lessons at the age of five, and at 17 taught art at Prague’s prestigious Czech art school, the Pragensis.

He did not live to see the fruition of his talents. Like many of those who became known as the artists of Terezin, he died in Auschwitz, murdered because of a subversive opera Der Kaiser von Atlantis (Emperor of Atlantis) he wrote in Terezin with his fellow prisoner, Czech composer Viktor Ullman. He was just 25.

The opera, written in the Brechtian post-modern tradition personifies Death in an age of absolute darknesss. But Death cannot die. Until he does, the world cannot be saved. At its dress rehearsal in Terezin, the Nazis grasped the opera’s not so secret message and both heroic men were sent to their deaths.