This was one aspect of the Holocaust that has really been overlooked by society. It was a haunting, but vivid detail of having to give up an identity in order to survive.
Forgetting should not be something anyone tells these survivors, since their rememberance probably keeps society in check.
If there were no survivors, I feer that society would repeat this annielation of an entire race.'
poignant content, produced nicely with meaningful music. There is a quietness to the telling of these two stories, that makes them unusually powerful, and particularly so for a day of remembrance. The interviewer's voice might be easily extracted
since I found it unneccessary and distracting. Regardless, the stories are exquisitely haunting.
Comments for Hidden Children of the Holocaust
Produced by Vivian Goodman
Other pieces by WKSU
Rating Summary
2 comments
Delores Williams
Posted on April 17, 2005 at 04:04 PM | Permalink
Review of Hidden Children of the Holocaust
This was one aspect of the Holocaust that has really been overlooked by society. It was a haunting, but vivid detail of having to give up an identity in order to survive.
Forgetting should not be something anyone tells these survivors, since their rememberance probably keeps society in check.
If there were no survivors, I feer that society would repeat this annielation of an entire race.'
vmerrick
Posted on June 30, 2004 at 06:28 AM | Permalink
Review of Hidden Children of the Holocaust
poignant content, produced nicely with meaningful music. There is a quietness to the telling of these two stories, that makes them unusually powerful, and particularly so for a day of remembrance. The interviewer's voice might be easily extracted
since I found it unneccessary and distracting. Regardless, the stories are exquisitely haunting.