In the wake of the attack
on Pearl Harbor and the declaration of war, thousands of Americans enlisted
in the U.S. armed forces. Among them was twenty-year-old Bronx resident
Ben Hurwitz. Like many of the men and women who entered military service,
Hurwitz (who changed his name to Brown after the war) kept a record of
his experiences. But his "journal" was a sketchpad, and, during his two
years in North Africa and Italy, Corporal Hurwitz drew and painted at every
opportunity. Hurwitz's pictures are accompanied by the artist's commentary
transcribed by historian Joshua Brown in November 1996. Sketches
used with permission of Eleanor A. Brown |