GIVE
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CHILDREN: Voices from the Lodz Ghetto |
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Read transcript » Conversations with Survivors In the spring and summer of 2007 the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum hosted a public program series featuring survivors of the Lodz ghetto. The survivors discussed from their own personal perspectives what it was like to experience a community struggling to live in spite of the most difficult circumstances during the Holocaust.
When a community is struck by calamity—no matter its origin or form—confusion, conflict, and loss, often unimaginable, follow. Most vulnerable to the turmoil are children, and the community’s future rides on the decisions made for and about them. The German invasion of Poland in September 1939 set off a series of events that forever altered the Jewish community of Lodz, Poland, one of the largest in Europe. Despite the Germans’ violent oppression and imposed squalor and hunger, the community leadership strove to create a “normal” world for the children as long as it could. The Jewish children of Lodz suffered the unfolding harsh realities and recorded their experiences. Their voices—preserved in letters, diaries, memoirs, and oral histories—as well as historic photographs, original documents, and objects from collections around the world offer a view into the struggle of a community and its young to live in spite of the most difficult circumstances. The special exhibition has been made possible in part with the sponsorship of Mildred Hofberg and Sandy & Stanley Bobb, Dan K. Wassong, Benjamin & Seema Pulier Charitable Foundation, Inc., and The Blanche and Irving Laurie Foundation, with additional support from the Lodzer Organization of California, The Marian & Eva Rokacz Family Foundation, the Helman Family, and the Stulberg Family.
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