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A Queens-based Holocaust survivor remembers her real-life rescuer played by Anthony Hopkins in One Life – JTA News – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Posted By on April 11, 2024

(New York Jewish Week) Ive known Hanna Slome for my entire life: She and her husband Henry Slome were close friends of my parents. I knew that in the 1930s, Henry fled Nazi Germany and Hanna had somehow gotten out of Czechoslovakia, but I didnt know the details of her escape.

Neither, it turned out, did Hanna. It was only in 1999 60 years after the event that she discovered she was one of 669 children, the majority of them Jewish, whod been saved from the Nazis by Nicholas Winton, a British stockbroker.

Wintons extraordinary scheme to rescue Czech children by bringing them to the UK was first recognized publicly on a BBC television show in 1988, where he was reunited with dozens of those who owed their lives to him. Now, a new feature film, One Life, chronicles the courageous, perilous humanitarian project. Anthony Hopkins stars as Winton, who in early 1939 spent a month in Prague just six weeks before Germany occupied Czechoslovakia and concocted a complex plan to raise money, forge documents and find homes for as many Jewish children as possible in England.

Hanna who turns 99 on Thursday never spoke much about how she ended up in England. I didnt want to relive that part of my life, she told me in a phone interview on Friday. It wasnt until watching a documentary about Winton 25 years ago that she was astonished to find her name on the list of children who made it to Britain on the Czech Kindertransport negotiated by Winton.

Hanna Beer, who was 14 at the time, lived in the city of Ostrava. Her father and older brother had managed to get to London; she and her mother intended to follow them. Hanna believes her father must have gotten word of Wintons enterprise, and signed her up for it.

Whereas One Life depicts heart-wrenching scenes of parents saying goodbye to their children at the Prague train station ahead of the 700-mile journey west, Hanna has a more intimate memory of the night before her departure. I was lying in bed with my mother, she told me this week, holding her hand and telling her I didnt want to go. She promised me she would come to England very soon. That never happened.

In the British capital, Hannas father and brother were living in a boarding house for refugees. Hanna lived with about five different foster families over the next few years. But my father would sit on the steps of their houses on many nights, to make sure I got home safely, she said. She worked as a maid, and to this day regrets that her formal education ended at age 14.

As World War II ended, Hannas father sent her to New York City, where she had relatives. Hanna believes her father already had received notice that her mother had been killed in Bergen-Belsen and at some point, after putting his daughter on the ship, he returned to his apartment and took his own life. Her brother lived the rest of his life in England.

In the aftermath of such trauma and tragedy, Hanna married Henry Slome, settled in the Flushing section of Queens, New York, and had two children, Jesse and Judy. She is now the grandmother of seven and great-grandmother of nine. (Many are in Israel, as Judy made aliyah decades ago.) I have a boyfriend whos nine years younger than me, Hanna, whose husband died in the early 1970s, told me. He lives nearby and calls me every day!

Hanna self-sufficient and still living by herself in the family home traveled to Prague in 2009 with her daughter for the 70th anniversary of her escape. She and some of the other children took that train ride again to London, where they were greeted by none other than Winton himself, then 100. He even took the group back to his spacious mansion in Maidenhead for a visit. (Winton died in 2015 at 106.)

Although the modest Winton was gratified by the attention and awards he received in his later years, including a knighthood, Hanna says he was haunted by the children left behind who ended up in the clutches of the Nazis. I know he was unhappy that he only saved 669, she said.

Wintons largest transport of Czech Jewish children was scheduled to happen on Sept. 1,1939. But that day, Germany invaded Poland and the borders were closed. Winton later wrote: Within hours of the announcement, the train disappeared. None of the 250 children aboard was seen again. We had 250 families waiting at Liverpool Street that day in vain. If the train had been a day earlier, it would have come through. Not a single one of those children was heard of again, which is an awful feeling.

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Hanna will mark her 99th birthday Thursday at the Museum of Jewish Heritage in Lower Manhattan, viewing another new Holocaust film, Irenas Vow, about a Polish housekeeper who sheltered Jews.

Hanna has seen One Life several times, including at the New York premiere in January. She says watching the film was not especially disturbing to her. The fact that I lost my whole family and six million others thats what makes me emotional, she said.

For a number of years, Hanna visited schools, telling the story of Sir Nicholas and her survival. Looking back now, just a year from the century mark, she sums it all up with gratitude and joy: Oh, boy, what a life Ive had. Im so happy to be here.

One Life is currently playing in select theaters nationwide, and is streaming on Amazon Prime, AppleTV and other platforms.

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A Queens-based Holocaust survivor remembers her real-life rescuer played by Anthony Hopkins in One Life - JTA News - Jewish Telegraphic Agency

The Tattooist of Auschwitz Trailer Teases a Holocaust-Set Love Story – TheWrap

Posted By on April 11, 2024

April 10, 2024 @ 11:30 AM

Peacock and Sky revealed the full official trailer for the limited series The Tattooist of Auschwitz, based on the internationally best-selling book by Heather Morris, on Wednesday.

The book and show are inspired by the real-life story of Lali and Gita Sokolov, who met while prisoners in the Auschwitz concentration camp during the Holocaust of World War II. The series is told in frame story, with Harvey Keitel as the older Lali recounting his story to a woman named Heather, played by Melanie Lynskey.

All six episodes of the original drama will land on Peacock on May 2.

The trailer opens with Keitels 80-year-old Lali Sokolov waking down a path with Melanie Lynskeys Heather Morris.

Mr. Sokolov, Morris addresses Lali, who counters with a warm Call me Lali.

Youre looking for someone to write your life story, she says.

60 years ago in 1942, Lali (portrayed by Jonah Hauer-King), a Slovakian Jew, was deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau, where over one million Jews were murdered during the Holocaust. Keitels Lali assures Lynskeys Morris that this is a love story.

Cramped quarters, stern commands and a volatile SS officer Baretzki (Jonas Nay) set a grim tone for Hauer-Kings Lali, who becomes a Ttowierer, or tattooist, at the concentration camp.

Every time I open my eyes, Keitel tells Lynskey, I am still there.

Another prisoner advises Lali to find something in your mind, a good thing. He tells Morris that did find something, or rather someone.

Enter Anna Prchniaks Gita, who gets her identification number tattooed on her arm by Lali. Something sparks the moment the two meet eyes. A tear rolls down Gitas cheek, and she smiles.

Nays Baretzki witnesses the flame kindle from the shadows, but Lali keeps cool when he asks about it.

We must keep living, Prchniak says. Whatever it takes.

The pair shares a kiss as Keitels Lali experiences the ghosts of his traumatic past in his present-day living room.

Love still exists, Prchniak whispers. Even here.

All six episodes of the limited series are directed by Tali Shalom-Ezer. Hans Zimmer and Kara Talve composed the score for the drama.

The Tattooist of Auschwitz is executive produced by Claire Mundell through her company Synchronicity Films and is produced in association with Sky Studios and All3Media International. The series is a co-production from Sky and Peacock. Jacquelin Perske is Executive Producer and lead writer for The Tattooist of Auschwitz alongside episode writers Evan Placey (Associate Producer) and Gabbie Asher. Serena Thompson is Executive Producer for Sky Studios.

The Tattooist of Auschwitz arrives on Peacock May 2 in a binge release.

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The Tattooist of Auschwitz Trailer Teases a Holocaust-Set Love Story - TheWrap

Holocaust Education Not as Simple as it Seems – Jewish Exponent

Posted By on April 11, 2024

Judy Rakowsky

Judy Rakowsky

When a bill was introduced last month in the Pennsylvania Senate to make Holocaust education uniform and mandatory, a survivor spoke at the Pennsylvania State Capitol about the need for teaching children about the industrialized genocide of 6 million Jews during World War II.

The Holocaust must be taught forever and ever, Holocaust survivor Sami Steigmann said. While more than a dozen states have legislation encouraging Holocaust education, few have come with funding to carry it out. Some well-meaning pushback comes from those who question the effectiveness of the efforts thus far. The millions of dollars spent on monuments, museums and education programs have not stemmed the tide of antisemitism.

The point has been made long before the current surge in antisemitic incidents. As Harvard Professor Emerita Ruth R. Wisse observed in a 2020 National Affairs article, In reality, anti-Semitism in the United States has spread in tandem with increased teaching about the Holocaust. She said that the problem in part stems from focusing on hate without addressing the way governments use grievance and blame to appeal to constituencies that can benefit them politically. Hitler himself came to power in an electoral process based on organizing politics against the Jews, to his political benefit.

The politics of grievance and blame may indeed foment hatred, distrust, envy, rage, fear, and violence, but it is primarily a political instrument for gaining, wielding, and extending power, Wisse wrote.

Centuries of anti-Jewish teaching and opposition are put into action when leaders need to win voters and followers, she observed.

Well-settled pieces of history are upended in this way. Take the way that the history of American slavery has been upended in state legislatures.

Last year, Florida officially changed it and now even requires middle schoolers to be taught that enslaved people reaped vocational benefits, as if there were any justification for brutally kidnapping people from their home country and shipping them around the world to be sold into lifelong slave labor.

This wave of political thinking is not limited to Florida. Lawmakers in 44 states, including Pennsylvania, have proposed restrictions on the teaching of racism and sexism, content that overemphasizes the dark, difficult chapters of American history at the expense of fostering patriotism, according to an analysis by Education Week in 2021.

Theres an extensive track record of governments using bedrock historical events to strum grievances in certain quarters of their population and distorting them for political gain. The history of the Holocaust itself has been subjected to legal contortions by governments across Europe and beyond in memory laws that ostensibly sought to protect it from distortion.

In 1986, Germany was the first to pass a memory law that was seen as a bulwark against a resurgence of Nazi ideology taking root again.

That law kicked off a trend that spread to many former Soviet satellites.

On my first visit to Poland in 1990, I witnessed the giddy exuberance of people feeling free after nearly five decades of communist oppression.

A mighty alliance of the trade union Solidarity and the Catholic Church brought down the Soviet communist government, followed by a seismic shift toward democracy and the swiftest and most effective conversion to a market economy in Europe.

By the time I returned to Warsaw a year later, there was a spring in the step of many Poles who were finally free to think about topics that had been taboo for decades, including the systematic murder of millions of Jews in death camps that Hitler purposefully placed on Polish soil.

Some of that release took the form of swastikas painted on buildings and freer expression of anti-Jewish thoughts. Soviet-era monuments at concentration camps lumped all the victims together as those who suffered under Hitlers fascism without mentioning the systematic extermination of Jews.

In those heady days of the 1990s, Poland set about erecting pillars of a western-style democracy, unlocking access to government archives, and creating an unfettered judiciary and allowing for independent media.

In December 1998 Poland joined the growing list of European nations that outlawed denial of the Holocaust. The laws sent a signal to former Soviet satellite populations that history would now be something that would hew to the facts instead of the political will of those in power.

Eventually, some 30 European nations would enact laws criminalizing statements about the past, according to historian Nikolay Koposov. In Memory Laws, Memory Wars, Politics of the Past in Europe and Russia, he said that the laws cemented the history of the Holocaust and also had a unifying effect on European nations after the fall of Soviet communism.

But politics would once again get in the way of true history.

Russia led the way, using a memory law to prohibit incorrect versions of history. In 2014, after Russia attacked and seized part of the Crimea, starting war with Ukraine, it enacted a law that sanitized the history of the brutal Stalin regime, penalizing the dissemination of false information on the activities of the USSR during the Second World War.

In Poland in 2015, a right-wing populist government allied with the Catholic Church gained control of the government in Poland. It proceeded to amend the very law enacted in 1998 to outlaw Holocaust denial. It criminalized all statements about Polands role in the Holocaust that implied any complicity.

The global outcry that followed prompted Polish leaders to defend their efforts. They were not trying to whitewash history but to counter misinformation.

As Uladzislau Belavusau writes in The Rise of Memory Laws in Poland, the revisionist legislation was designed to stir up nationalism and safeguard support for the government by feeding primitive populism with the neurotic memory of World War II.

It followed revelations about the Poles burning their neighbors alive in Jedwabne in 1941 and the massacre of Jews in Kielce after the war in 1946, and many other incidents that occurred because of discoveries by scholars of historical facts who gained access to archives after the fall of communism.

As the impulse to restrict and cancel true history spreads in the U.S., we should learn from Russia and Poland.

As Sami Steigmann says, we do need to teach people about the Holocaust. But we must avoid politicizing it for self-serving aims. Otherwise, we could see widespread Holocaust education that undermines the teaching of true history.

Judy Rakowsky is the author of several books on Jewish history.

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Holocaust Education Not as Simple as it Seems - Jewish Exponent

Westchester Area Authors to Appear Live to Discuss New Book on the Holocaust – The Inside Press

Posted By on April 11, 2024

April 10, 2024 A group of Westchester County area second-generation Holocaust survivors will appear live today on Zoom starting at 7 p.m. to discuss a book they have written and published documenting their families experiences during the Holocaust. Testaments of Courage in the Holocaust is a compilation of true stories told by the authors that describes the courage and resilience of their family members who escaped the Nazis final solution.

Putting this book together was a labor of love for me a gift to the dear friends I met when I joined a Storykeeping Workshop sponsored by the Holocaust & Human Rights Education Center. said Melanie Roher, one of the authors of the book. When I listened to everyones stories during the class, I wanted to remember them, and not lose them over time. It has been a joy to work with each of my classmates, whose parents stories now live on these pages.

Roher lives in White Plains, NY, and she is a member of the Holocaust & Human Rights Education Center (HHREC) GenerationsForward Speakers Bureau, a second and third generation group that includes children and grandchildren of Holocaust survivors who appear at area schools, synagogues, churches and other community events. HHREC Memory Keepers are trained speakers who tell their familys story from their next generation perspective, adding new meaning to the survivors powerful stories of witness. Other local authors whose stories appear in the book include Pat Gaston (Irvington), Tina Goldman (Ossining), Michelle Griffenberg (Tarrytown), Ziporah Janowski (Croton on the Hudson), Gloria Lazar (Tarrytown), Joan Poulin (Somers), Vivian Pronin (Hastings-on-Hudson) Helen Rubel (Irvington), Dennis Schoen (Fairlawn, NJ), and Debby Ziering (Greenwich, CT.)

In the book Forward written by Lazar, she describes her experience working with fellow authors. The personal histories in this book reflect months and years of research and reflection by a group of second and third generation descendants of Holocaust survivors, and in one case, a child Holocaust survivor. During the winter and spring of 2019, we met in a workshop each week and engaged in the arduous process of dissecting and writing our family histories. We searched through letters, diaries, photographs, audio and video tapes every form of record to uncover the struggle, displacement and survival of our family members who emigrated to the United States from almost every country in Europe where Jews were hunted by the Nazis. They are remembered by daughters, sons and grandchildren determined to document the courage of these brave individuals who escaped the Nazis final solution. The difficult journeys taken by our families reflect the ultimate triumph of the human spirit against the inhumane efforts by the Nazis to eliminate the Jews of Europe. We honor these brave men and women whose DNA we possess and whose spirit we hope to illuminate in our stories.

The book is available for sale on Amazon at https://www.amazon.com/Testaments-Courage-Holocaust-Children-Survivors/dp/B0C87SSX3L and is available for teachers to utilize in their classrooms from the HHREC Anna & Nicholas Elefant Library in White Plains.

To register for this event visit HHRECNY.org.

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Westchester Area Authors to Appear Live to Discuss New Book on the Holocaust - The Inside Press

Peacock’s holocaust drama The Tattooist of Auschwitz shares new trailer, posters and images – Flickering Myth

Posted By on April 11, 2024

With just over three weeks to go until The Tattooist of Auschwitz premieres on Peacock, a new trailer has been released for the limited drama series.

Based on Heather Morris 2018 bestselling novel, the series tells the powerful true story of holocaust survivor Lali Sokolov (Harvey Keitel and Jonah Hauer-King), a prisoner who was given the job of tattooing ID numbers in the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp, as he relives the trauma of his youth and his memories of falling in love after finding the courage to tell his story to a novice writer. Watch the trailer below

The Tattooist of Auschwitz is an event series inspired by the real-life story of Jewish Holocaust survivors Lali and Gita Sokolov. Lali (Jonah Hauer-King) arrived at Auschwitz-Birkenau in 1942, and shortly after arrival, he was made one of the ttowierer (tattooists), charged to ink identification numbers onto fellow prisoners arms. One day, he meets Gita (Anna Prchniak) when tattooing her prisoner number on her arm. They experience love at first sight, and so begins a courageous, unforgettable, and human story. Under constant guard from a volatile Nazi SS officer Baretzki (Jonas Nay), Lali and Gita became determined to keep each other alive.

Around 60 years later, Lali (Harvey Keitel) meets novice writer Heather Morris (Melanie Lynskey). Recently widowed, Lali finds the courage to tell the world his story. In recounting his story to Heather, Lali, in his 80s, faces the traumatic ghosts of his youth and relives his memories of falling in love in the most horrific of places.

The series stars Jonah Hauer-King, Melanie Lynskey, Anna Prchniak, Jonas Nay, and Harvey Keitel.

The Tattooist of Auschwitz premieres on Peacock on May 2nd.

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Peacock's holocaust drama The Tattooist of Auschwitz shares new trailer, posters and images - Flickering Myth

We Israelis are the biggest Holocaust deniers – Mondoweiss

Posted By on April 11, 2024

I remember how our Israeli Prime Minster, Benjamin Netanyahu, told Holocaust survivors at an elderly home,The Holocaust happened because there was no State of Israel. If there had been a Jewish state before, there would have been no Holocaust.

Later, he would tell the whole world while speaking from the Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum that the Jewish state has learned the lessons of the Holocaust. Has the world learned the lessons of the Holocaust?

What lesson has the Jewish state learned?

That we, ourselves, can commit a Holocaust in Gaza in 2024, and then deny that it exists. Indeed, we have even decried sober UN appraisals of our genocide as an obscene inversion of reality.

We havent even seen the worst of it. As Palestinian-American author Susan Abulhawa reports from her visit to Gaza, the reality on the ground is infinitely worse than the worst videos and photos that were seeing in the West. Israelis generally avoid seeing any of it what do we care?

People first resorted to eating horse and donkey feed, but thats gone. Now theyre eating the donkeys and horses, Abulhawa writes. Some are eating stray cats and dogs, which are themselves starving and sometimes feeding on human remains that litter streets where Israeli snipers picked off people who dared to venture within the sight of their scopes. The old and weak have already died of hunger and thirst.

What I see is a holocaust. she summarizes. The incomprehensible culmination of 75 years of Israeli impunity for persistent war crimes.

I second that.

But most Israelis are holocaust deniers. Oh, how we hate the Holocaust deniers, so oblivious to the total destruction of European Jewry. How could they be so utterly callous in questioning the numbers, saying that it was just a war?

Thats what we do. We downplay it, call it a war of self-defense, and erase history it all started on October 7. Over 13,000 dead children, some starved to death, do not seem to alter our perception. Its just collateral damage.

This is possible because the Palestinians are Nazis now. If you ask about civilians, Israelis will, in the words of former Prime Minister Naftali Bennet, say: What is wrong with you?! Or, like Israeli President Isaac Herzog, they would assert that there are no uninvolved in Gaza.

Theyre all Nazis.

But you know what? We are the Judeo-Nazis now. Its never been so clear. Oh, yes, there are right-wing Judeo-Nazis, who have spoken of wiping out Huwwara before October 7, but now there are the many kibbutzniks who openly speak of wiping out Gaza. Two-thirds of us, including nearly 40% of the left wing, literally want to deprive Gazans of the most basic humanitarian aid (its 80% on the right wing, by the way, and they constitute about two-thirds of Israeli voters).

In other words, most of us literally want to starve Palestinians.

Others opt for a more proportionate genocide, simply bombing them by the hundreds, ostensibly for the purpose of killing one Hamas leader.

We have learned nothing. Our morality is dust.

Should I be more nuanced? Yes, perhaps there were some more sensible Nazis. I hear Hitler was generally quite polite in his familiar circles. But not to the human animals. They could be exterminated, and the world would be a better place without such vermin.

Now the Palestinians are the human animals, in the words of our Defense Minister, Yoav Galant. I havent heard many Israelis rebuff his words. After all, hes been critical of Netanyahu from inside the government hes nuanced!

The depths to which we have sunk leave me wondering how there still are countries on our side. What the hell is wrong with them? Dont they see that, by supporting Israel economically and militarily, they are abetting a genocide?

Clearly, Israelis arent the only ones who havent learned the lessons of the Holocaust.

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We Israelis are the biggest Holocaust deniers - Mondoweiss

Holocaust survivor tours the ‘Seeing Auschwitz’ exhibit – Spectrum News

Posted By on April 11, 2024

CHARLOTTE, N.C. A worldwide exhibit providing photographic images of the Holocaust recently made its North American debut in Charlotte, North Carolina.

The Seeing Auschwitz exhibit is currently on display at the Nine Eighteen NineStudioGallery in the Visual and Performing Arts (VAPA) Center in Charlotte.

Its being hosted by theStan Greenspon Holocaust and Social Justice Education Center at Queens University of Charlotte.

The exhibit takes people on an eye-opening journey, immersing them in the grim realities of what transpired at the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration and extermination camp.

The exhibition will showcase a collection of 100 photographs, sketches and testimonies, allowing attendees to gain a deeper understanding of the German Nazi camp Auschwitz and the Holocaust.

Associate Director for The Greenspon Center Judy LaPietra first saw this exhibit in London. She said it was important to bring this experience to the United States.

To bring an exhibit like this to Charlotte, that has such an impact, it really speaks to the fact we are ensuring this legacy, the story of the Holocaust continues, LaPietra said. I want our survivors and witnesses to know that we take that responsibility on, and I think this exhibit moves that idea forward.

She added over 13,000 people have seen the exhibit so far, hopefully each of them learning about the victims stories.

What this exhibit does so well is really underscore, even in a photo, the story of the victim, LaPietra said.

The Seeing Auschwitz exhibit evokes strong emotions for Holocaust survivors and their families, such as Frieda Schwartz, bringing back painful memories.

We have to make the most of having [the exhibit] here, Schwartz said.

Schwartzs parents were living in Polandwhen they escaped the Nazi invasion. Her parents were taken in and concealed by an elderly couple in Siberia.

However, Schwartzs father was eventually apprehended and sent to a work camp.

Schwartzsmother would soon give birth to her in a dirt cellar.

The family was reunited after the war ended, but faced many hardships before coming to the United States.

My family ran from Poland, so our history is totally different, Schwartz said. But some of my parents families stayed. [At this exhibit], I could be looking at the back of an uncle or cousin and I would never know it.

Schwartz added shes grateful to the StanGreensponHolocaust and Social Justice Education Center for bringing this exhibit to North Carolina. Shes encouraging people and younger generations to see all these images, so this part of history is neither repeated nor erased.

Let it all touch us however it does to make us better and to make the world understand we cant go back. We have to learn from history, Schwartz said.

The 'Seeing Auschwitz' exhibit will be on display at the VAPA Center through April 15.

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Holocaust survivor tours the 'Seeing Auschwitz' exhibit - Spectrum News

SNL: Michael Che Is ‘Shocked to Hear Ye Believes in the Holocaust’ – TheWrap

Posted By on April 11, 2024

Michael Che and Colin Jost had plenty of jokes during last nights Weekend Update segment on Saturday Night Live, including one about Ye, the rapper formerly known as Kanye West. In light of a new lawsuit brought against the performer that claims Ye said he is like Hitler minus the gas chambers, Che told the audience, I, for one, am shocked to hear that Ye believes in the Holocaust.

The duo spared no one throughout the segment. Che kicked things off by explaining that Josh Bowling, the man who married conjoined twin Abby Hensel, is facing a paternity suit from his ex-wife. Of Bowling, who also lives with Hanels sister Brittany, Che said, The last thing that guy needs is another mouth to feed.

Che himself wasnt exempt. After Jost explained that Live with Kelly and Mark reran an episode from 2023 in which host Kelly Ripa asked to go on Diddys yacht. Even crazier, he continued, SNL is airing an episode right now with a guy who was on Diddys yacht last week before a photo of Che holding a champagne glass flashed on the screen.

Later in the clip, Che shared that scientists in Portugal accidentally gave life to a mouse embryo with an extra leg where its genitals are, and Brother, same! he exclaimed before attempting to high five Jost, who remained silent before he asked, Yours is the size of a mouse leg?

Watch Weekend Update in the video above.

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SNL: Michael Che Is 'Shocked to Hear Ye Believes in the Holocaust' - TheWrap

Hulu’s ‘We Were the Lucky Ones’ is a good reminder to talk to your elders while you still can – The Washington Post

Posted By on April 11, 2024

In Hulus limited-series We Were the Lucky Ones, the Kurc family in Poland is separated during World War II and spends years trying to reunite. This was before the Internet and cell phones so tracking each others whereabouts was hard.

Its based on a non-fiction book of the same name by Georgia Hunter, who wrote about her own familys story. As a teen, Hunter discovered her late-grandfather Eddy, (who had changed his name from Addy), along with his parents and siblings were Holocaust survivors.

Logan Lerman, who plays Hunters grandfather, says the characters story resembles his own. Addy escaped to South America during the war and built a life in Brazil, while Lermans family went to China.

My grandfather was a refugee with his family, said Lerman. He fled Germany in the late 1930s and ended up on this long journey similar to my character. He ended up in Shanghai with his parents and sister because I guess it was one of the countries that was letting Jews in at the time. Addy also had a long journey as a refugee, seeking a country that would let them in.

It took years for Hunter to trace the Kurcs lineage. We Were the Lucky Ones serves as a reminder to learn your familys history.

Joey King, who plays youngest daughter Halina, values having a close relationship with her grandmother and says they are thick as thieves. King says her ancestry and heritage has always been such an open conversation.

There wasnt ever a moment that I learned about the Holocaust that I can recall. It was just something that was always talked about in my home. When you grow up in a Jewish family, its not this defining moment in school where theyre like, And this is the Holocaust. I knew about it well before we learned about it in school.

When it comes to sharing accounts of the Holocaust, not every survivor wants to go into detail about their experiences.

They had to go through such horror and such dark times, said Michael Aloni, who plays Selim, husband to Kurc sibling Mila. Some did not say a word about what they went through. They just continued with their lives and that was their victory.

Don M. Fox, a historian and author, says many former WWII combat veterans also keep that part of their life to themselves.

So many of them just exited the war and, particularly if they didnt stay in the service, they just went on with their lives.

Communication is so vital to sharing knowledge and the National WWII Museum now uses AI for an exhibit that allows visitors to have virtual conversations with photographs of veterans.

When speaking with actual Holocaust survivors or former military members, Fox suggests approaching the conversation with open-ended questions.

I would start out by saying, I know that you were in Europe during the Second World War. Can you tell me what that was like? or If you dont mind, start from the beginning when you first became aware of what was happening around you.

Even if your relatives are no longer alive, Henry Lloyd-Hughes, who plays oldest sibling Genek Kurc, points out that, like Hunter, anyone can do research.

Its not always a question of listening, he said. There are diaries and photos in attics with stories in everyones family that someone might not be (aware of).

Sam Woolf says portraying Halinas boyfriend and later husband on the series led him to dig into his own background. Ive had so many more conversations with my mother since, he said. While filming in Poland, the Britain born-and-raised actor was able to visit a nearby town where his grandfather was born and found his birth certificate. Its made Woolf want to honor his Polish heritage.

Now Im applying for Polish citizenship, he said. It was this sort of knitting together of information Ive never had because you often dont think to ask and then sometimes its too late. I lost all my grandparents quite young at 13 or 14. I could have asked. You never get that opportunity back.

Earlier this year, a study released by the New York-based Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, known as the Claims Conference, reported about 245,000 survivors are still living across more than 90 countries.

Kurc family matriarch Nechuma is portrayed by Robin Weigert, who admits to carrying guilt about the sobering fact that Holocaust survivors are dying.

There are Holocaust stories in my family that I will never know. My (grandfather) had relatives. I dont know their names. I dont think my father ever heard about them. I regret every single conversation I didnt have, she said.

This week, the Claims Conference announced a global initiative to combat antisemitism by using Holocaust survivors stories as a way to educate.

Theres a difference between reading something in a history book or on Wikipedia, and talking to a human being that actually went through (the Holocaust), said Hadas Yaron, who plays Selims wife, Mila.

Even if youre personally not interested in your familys history, or arent a fan of clutter and want to cull artifacts, Fox advises to purge wisely and keep a record of information to pass on.

Keep it in your family. Study it yourself in more detail. Share it within your family. Whats more important, from my perspective, is that on a multi-generational basis, you develop a culture within your own lineage... Theres always the chance that a generation or two down the line, there will be some some great appreciation or desire to know more.

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Hulu's 'We Were the Lucky Ones' is a good reminder to talk to your elders while you still can - The Washington Post

Learn the History Behind the Holocaust at the Ocean County Library Toms River Branch – New Jersey Stage

Posted By on April 11, 2024

originally published: 04/10/2024

(TOMS RIVER, NJ) -- When the threat of genocide ran rampant in Europe and around the globe during World War II, was American intervention adequate, or even possible? See the Holocaust in the context of the time during "Combatting Hate: America and the Holocaust" at the Ocean County Library Toms River Branch on Tuesday, May 7, 2024. The event begins at 6:30pm.

Many historians agree that forceful American rescue efforts might have saved lives but they differ over feasibility. Steps taken by President Franklin D. Roosevelt, his advisors and cabinet, and religious leaders were affected by the Great Depression, immigration opponents and the German American Bund including New Jerseys Camp Nordland.

Professor Barbara Krasner, Juvenile and Young Adult author and Director of the Mercer County Holocaust, Genocide and Human Rights Education Center at Mercer County Community Colleges West Windsor campus, will lead this second presentation in OCLs continuing Combatting Hate series.

The history, novel, and poetry writer holds a Ph.D. in Holocaust and Genocide Studies from Gratz College in Pennsylvania. She has introduced young adults and children to concepts such as politics and genocide in more than 40 books.Her juvenile books about Jewish and Russian immigrants, the impact of the 1918 flu epidemic and native nations of the Northeast, the Great Basin and Plateau and the Southwest are available at the Ocean County Library.

Please register at https://bit.ly/OclTrHolocaust to attend this free Young Adult-Teen program in OCLs ongoing Combatting Hate series. For more information, call (732) 349-6200, stop by the OCL Toms River Branch, 101 Washington Street, or visit http://www.theoceancountylibrary.org/events.

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Learn the History Behind the Holocaust at the Ocean County Library Toms River Branch - New Jersey Stage


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