“Through the Eye of the Needle: The Fabric Art of Esther  Nisenthal Krinitz,” will open Sunday, February 26, in the  Arrington Gallery of The Birmingham Museum of Art. For Esther  Krinitz, her deep-rooted belief in God and her Jewish faith  helped deliver her and her younger sister Mania from the gates of  the Maidanek Nazi concentration camp. Krinitz’s fabric art tells  the survival story of the two young girls as they struggled to  stay alive in German-occupied Poland during the Holocaust with  the help of gentiles. Told through 36 intricately designed fabric  panels, “Through the Eye of the Needle” will be on display  through April 30.   “With her needle, Esther Krintiz embroiders panels of sublime  beauty that tell a story of great sorrow and loss and eventual  salvation,” says Miriam Fowler, Birmingham Museum of Art  education curator. Krintiz begins her biographical journey as a  child of a devout Jewish family in the small village of Mniszek  in Poland. Her first memories of the Nazi’s brutal arrival are of  a soldier “roughing up” her grandfather and cutting his beard as  her grandmother watched screaming.   During their occupancy, Esther’s family chose defiance as a means  of survival. Her father and older brother lived in the woods to  save themselves from being forced to a labor camp. Her mother  directed the family to go in separate directions while fleeing  from a Gestapo raid. Esther herself sought the services of a  dentist in a nearby Nazi camp and taught her friend German so the  soldiers wouldn’t suspect them of being Jewish. These startling  vignettes are depicted in the textiles. The most riveting images detail the departure of Esther andMania from the rest of the family, all of whom were killed.Incredible emotion echoes in this series of panels at having leftloved ones behind. The story continues through forests and villagesof Poland as the girls struggle to keep their identities hidden.The sisters returned after the liberation of Poland to find theirhomes occupied by strangers and their family and Jewish neighborsgone.   Now free, but unsure of where to go, the girls ended up at a  displaced persons camp, where they met their future husbands. The  ending panels come back full circle to a happy village filled  with the love and togetherness of family.   Never claiming to be an artist, Esther used her dressmaking  skills to stitch a story she could leave behind for her two  daughters. The girls realized what an amazing story these fabrics  wove and knew the art, as well as the history, needed to be seen  by many.   “Through the Eye of the Needle” is organized by Art &  Remembrance and is running in conjunction with “I Never Saw  Another Butterfly: Children’s Drawings and Poems from Terezin  Concentration Camp, 1942-1944” at the Birmingham Civil Rights  Institute.   The Birmingham Museum is at 2000 Eighth Avenue North and Richard  Arrington Boulevard. For information, 205-254-2278 or  www.artsbma.org.          
						