Showing posts with label Holocaust survivor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Holocaust survivor. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 15, 2015

Holocaust Remembrance Day: Shouldering an Inheritance of Grief

Holocaust Remembrance Day: Shouldering an Inheritance of Grief

CANDLES
To be the child of Holocaust survivors is to grow up in the company of ghosts. By the time I was born, our large German-Jewish family was reduced to an inverted pyramid. My father didn't remember his grandparents and never knew half of his aunts and uncles, but the lost generations were palpable in their absence. You could smell Grandpa's sorrow in his cigar, taste Grandma's grief in the chicken soup. They missed their parents and grandparents, whose ashes lay in the dust of Buchenwald; their brown-eyed sisters and brothers, finished off by the SS; their many cousins; and all the children and grandchildren they would never have.
At our family's Passover Seders, in addition to the four children scripted to ask symbolic questions, there was always a fifth child at the table, the child who did not survive the Holocaust.
I struggled for decades with what to say to this fifth child, my emotional Siamese twin, a child whose voracious hunger for a life unlived I could never sate. Long ago I realized that I could never laugh loud enough, study hard enough, run fast enough or sing beautifully enough to make up for the joy she will never experience, the lessons she will never learn, the races she will never run and the songs she will never sing.
There were days when this martyred child wouldn't let me have a moment's peace; she was my personal Anne Frank who followed me everywhere. At Wrigley Field, while everyone else was guessing the crowd count, she'd pinch my arm and whisper: "Do you know how many stadiums-full it takes to reach 6 million dead relatives?" When I was stopped at a train crossing, she'd sit in the back, kicking my seat, daring me to imagine a one-way ride in a cattle car. She clung to my legs whenever I heard a German accent.
She brought out the worst and the best I had to give, and she was my constant companion -- until I had a child of my own.
One day, I had a vision of my own daughter intercepting the little girl and taking her by the hand to go outside to play. For the first time, I imagined the sound of the little girl's laughter. And then the burden that had sat on my chest since I have had memory began to melt away.
I began to feel my great-grandmother stand behind me and nod approvingly as I made chicken soup. I sensed my great-grandfather putting his hand on my shoulder when I took a job in the Jewish community. I pictured my brown-eyed grand-aunt smiling as I sang my daughter a Hebrew lullaby.
On the day of my daughter's Bat Mitzvah, the little girl and I watched as a new generation assumed the mantle of our Jewish tradition. Finally, I was able to promise her that Hitler didn't win.
I never saw her again.
On Holocaust Remembrance Day, I still light a memorial candle for her, and pray that she is at peace.
A version of this post originally appeared on jufnews.org.

Friday, September 5, 2014

Hallmark SpiritClips - The Fork


A Holocaust survivor encourages her soon to be wed granddaughter. We can't control all the events of life but we can control how we look at them.
Starring: Peggy Lord Chilton, Kelly Huddleston, Harv Popick
Writer, Director, and Producer: Rob Fried







Genre

Drama / Romance / Short Films

Run Time

5:00 min.

Available

United States

Cast

Grandma Ruth: Peggy Lord Chilton
Susan: Kelly Huddleston
Frederick: Harv Popick
Mitchell: William Longstaff
Photographer: Mike Holley

Crew

Writer, Director, and Producer: Rob Fried
Executive Producer: Noessa Higa
Line Producer: Allison Gorelik
Casting Director: Elisha Gruer, C.S.A.
Casting Director: Michelle Levy
Director of Photography: Imre Juhasz
Editor: Jacob Chase
Production Designer: Danielle Osborne
Art Director: Christiana Rubin
Composer: The Newton Brothers
Costume Designer: Laura Galli
First Assistant Director: Aaron Steele-Nicholson
Sound Mixer: Bradford Craig
Key Hair & Make-up: Autumn Hand
First Assistant Camera: Steve Smith
Second Assistant Camera: Denisse Kindl
Gaffer: Michael Lemmon
Key Grip: Doug Cragoe
Swing: Keith Schwalenberg
Script Supervisor: Kimberley J. Roper
Production Coordinator: Jed Linder
Assistant Make-up Artist: Jennifer Miller
Production Assistant: Micaela Brown
Production Assistant: Kris Mercer
Post Production Supervisor: Eric M. Klein
Color Timer: Bobby Maruvada
Sound Design: James Melvin
Sound Mixer: Scott Bruzenak
Legal Counsel: J. Jason Dollar
Videographer: Tyrrell Shaffner
SpiritClips Staff: Craig Ginsberg
Spirit Staff Assistant: Chris Commons
SpiritClips Staff: Steven Tagle




Monday, June 23, 2014

Sharing Love For Sweden - Eva Haglund - "BLESS ISRAEL"


BLESS ISRAEL
by Eva Haglund, Sweden

I am thinking about what it means to bless Israel - to bless the state Israel and the Jewish people. Here are a few of my thoughts.

One way is to help ONE Holocaust survivor who is starving and to give food or to buy a present for a Holocaust survivor. 

To bless Israel can be to invite a lonely Messianic Jew for dinner or to have a cup of coffee together. It can be to give food also for the Messianic Jews who do not have much money for food. Jesus prayed in John 17:21 that love will be a testimony to the world in Body of Christ. He talks about love to each other in John 15:12, "This is My commandment that you love one another as I have loved you."

I do not think He means just in a church building. I believe the church is made up of Christians, with Jesus as the head. We all need each other in the Body. Friendship is not just in a building, but rather  the "hand" needs the "foot" and so on. All with the same value. In Gal.3:28 is written that we are all one in Christ.

I think when Messianic Jews are blessed in congregations this also blesses IsraelRelatives will notice if they are given food. It is a testimony to unsaved Jews.

To bless Israel is to comfort Jews in different ways.

It is written in Isaiah 40:1, "Comfort, comfort My people." It can mean to both comfort all people who are not saved, to comfort Christians ( both Messianic Jews and Gentiles) and to comfort the Jewish people.

To bless Israel and "comfort" My people - it is important to think about that many people suffer today. Many Jews suffer and we can comfort with words, show compassion and take time talking with people. Comfort is to know that somebody has time to listen, somebody has time in a world of much stress. Comfort can also be done by counseling people.


In the Body of Christ there needs today to be more fellowship and friendship. Now I believe it is a time of a restoration, as done in Acts.2:46; eating together and having fellowship as Jesus also had with the disciples in John 21, when they were eating breakfast at the sea.

Jesus wants to be a Friend, not just someone we work for. He and our heavenly Daddy has fellowship together, as it should be In the Body of Christ. We need to be more like a big family. As we become more like this, it will be a comfort for people, because care and love also heals.

To "comfort my people" I think is also to give the message about Jesus. He is the source of all comfort, as He is the Comforter. 

We need to open our hearts and also to give comfort to the Jews who encounter much antisemitism today. We need to bless Israel  - the Jewish people around the world and not just the state of Israel.

Give a cup of coffee or tea to one today. 


Friday, August 23, 2013

Natan is an artist. He is a Holocaust survivor.

Rachel Boskey
Aug. 23, 2013
Shabbat Shalom dear Facebook friends!

I want to introduce you a dear couple whom Avner Boskey and I have come to love in the last years -- Natan Friedman and his wife Shoshana. Natan and Shoshana live in our town. 

Natan is an artist. He is a Holocaust survivor who escaped death by assuming the identity of a Polish child and living in a monastery. After World War Two, Natan sailed with thousands of others, mostly young people, on the famous “Exodus” ship and he stood on Israel’s shores briefly in August 1947. But all of the Jewish people on the “Exodus” were refused entry to their homeland and were sent back to Europe.

 Natan finally arrived in Israel on May 15, 1948. In Israel, Natan became an accomplished scientist. His wife Shoshana was a schoolteacher with a master’s degree in English literature. They have two children and seven grandchildren. 

Natan has created many amazing works of art over the years, both paintings and sculptures. Some of them reflect the traumas and horrors he experienced as a Jewish child in Poland and many others reflect his life of many years in Israel. Next week Natan and his art will be featured on an Israeli TV program. 

Today I was privileged to photograph some of Natan’s works which will be shown on the TV program. To know Natan and Shoshana is to love them! — with Avner Boskey and ‎נתן פרידמן‎. (16 photos)