Yehiel De-Nur (; De-Nur means 'of the fire' in Aramaic; also Romanized Dinoor, Di-Nur), also known by his pen name Ka-Tsetnik 135633 (), born Yehiel Feiner (16 May 1909 â 17 July 2001), was a Jewish writer and Holocaust survivor, whose books were inspired by his time as a prisoner in the Auschwitz concentration camp.
Yehiel De-Nur was born in Sosnowiec, Poland. He was a pupil in Chachmei Lublin Yeshiva and later supported Zionism. In 1931, he published a book of Yiddish poetry, the extant copies of which he tried to destroy after the war.
During World War II, De-Nur spent two years as a prisoner in Auschwitz. In 1945, he immigrated to Mandatory Palestine (now Israel). He wrote several books and essays in Modern Hebrew about his experiences in the camp using his identity number at Auschwitz, Ka-Tsetnik 135633 (sometimes "K. Tzetnik").
The word Ka-Tsetnik () is, in the Yiddish dialect that was spoken in the camps, a prisoner or inmate (derived from "ka tzet", the pronunciation of KZ, the acronym for Konzentrationslager); 135633 was De-Nur's concentration camp number. He also used the name Karl Zetinski (Karol Cetinsky, again the derivation from "KZ") as a refugee, hence the confusion over his real name when his works were first published.
De-Nur was married to Nina De-Nur â the daughter of Prof. Joseph Asherman, a Tel Aviv gynecologist â who, as a young woman during the British governance of Palestine, had served in the British Army. Nina sought him out after reading his first novel Salamandra, and eventually they were married. She was instrumental in the translation and publication of many of his books. They had two children, a son (Lior) and a daughter (Daniella), named after the sister Daniella from House of Dolls, both still living in Israel. She trained with Virginia Satir in the 1970s. Later in life, Nina changed her name to Eli-Yah De-Nur.
In 1976, because of recurring nightmares and depression, De-Nur subjected himself to a form of psychedelic psychotherapy promoted by Dutch psychiatrist Jan Bastiaans expressly for concentration camp survivors. The treatment included the use of the hallucinogen LSD, and the visions experienced during this therapy became the basis for his book, Shivitti. The book's title is derived from David's Psalms 16:8, () "I am ever mindful of the LORDâÂÂs presence."
Yehiel De-Nur died in Tel Aviv on 17 July 2001.
His civic identity was revealed when he testified at the Eichmann trial on 7 June 1961. In his opening statement, De-Nur described Auschwitz in unearthly metaphors, saying:
After saying this, De-Nur collapsed and gave no further testimony.
Tom Hurwitz, son of the TV producer showing the trial live at the time, was present during this testimony and recounts the collapse as a stroke.
In an interview on 60 Minutes broadcast on 6 February 1983, De-Nur recounted the incident of his fainting at the Eichmann trial to host Mike Wallace.
In her report on the trial, Eichmann in Jerusalem, Hannah Arendt perhaps sarcastically implies that his fainting might have been because he was "deeply wounded" by the polite efforts of the prosecutor Gideon Hausner and presiding judge Moshe Landau to get him to speak in more concrete descriptive terms.
De-Nur wrote his first book about the Auschwitz experience, Salamandra, over two and a half weeks, while in a British army hospital in Italy in 1945. The original manuscript was in Yiddish, but it was first published in 1946 in Hebrew in edited form.
His most famous work was 1955's House of Dolls, which portrayed the Freudenabteilung or "Joy Division" as a Nazi system keeping Jewish women as sex slaves in concentration camps. He suggests that the subject of the book was a younger sister who did not survive the Holocaust.
While De-Nur's books are still a part of the Israeli high-school curriculum, Na'ama Shik, a researcher at Yad Vashem, The Holocaust Martyrs' and Heroes' Remembrance Authority in Israel, has claimed that House of Dolls is a kind of pornographic fiction, not least because sexual relations with Jews were strictly forbidden to all Aryan citizens of Nazi Germany, so that in fact the women in the brothels were all non-Jewish prisoners. In De-Nur's 1961 book Piepel, about sexual abuse of young boys in the camps, he suggests the subject of this book was a younger brother who also died in a concentration camp.
House of Dolls is at times pointed to as the inspiration behind the Nazi exploitation genre of serialized cheap paperbacks, known in Israel as Stalag fiction (). Their publisher later acknowledged the Eichmann trial as the motive behind the series. The British post-punk band Joy Division derived its name from this book, which was quoted in their song "No Love Lost".
In 2023 the documentary about De-Nur directed by Assaf Lapid was produced. The title alludes to the term "planet Auschwitz" which he used during his testimony at Eichmann trial. Ofer Liebergall suggests that the title has a second meaning. After undergoing psychiatric treatment De-Nur changed his perception about Auschwitz: he came to the realization that it was not another world, but a man-made place. At a TV interview with journalist he said:
The film won the Best Investigative Documentary Award at the 2023 Jerusalem Film Festival, the recipient of the Emerging Filmmaker Award at the 2024 Atlanta Jewish Film Festival, and was nominated for the Ophir Award in the Best Documentary Over 60 Minutes category in 2024.