Difference between revisions of "Category:Holocaust Children Studies--1940s"

From 4 Enoch: : The Online Encyclopedia of Second Temple Judaism, and Christian and Islamic Origins
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(12 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 63: Line 63:
|}
|}


[[File:1947 OSE.jpg|150px]]
== Overview ==


==== 1947 ====
"In the immediate postwar period, thousands of testimonies were taken from Jewish children who survived the Holocaust. These testimonies, many of them in the children’s own handwriting, enable us better to understand the Holocaust experience of Jewish children and provide a unique insight into their world ... The initiators of the collections believed that the testimonies served therapeutic purposes for the children involved, and also broader educational and moral purposes—for example, to focus the world’s attention on the Jewish tragedy


[[File:1947 Hochberg-Marianskwa.jpg|thumb|left|150px]]
Many collections of children’s testimonies were initiated in the immediate postwar years. Benjamin Tenenbaum (1914–1999), a Polish-born Jewish prewar emigrant to Palestine, traveled to Poland in 1946. With the aid of a few friends, he collected 1,000 “autobiographies” written by surviving Jewish children ... Dr. Helena Wrobel-Kagan, a survivor of Bergen-Belsen, started a school at that camp in late 1945. She asked the children, themselves survivors, to write essays entitled “My Way from Home to the Camp” ... Similarly, the Jewish Historical Commissions in Poland and in the American Zone in Germany focused on children in their effort to collect survivor testimonies. Other Jewish organizations, such as the National Relief Committee for  Deportees in Hungary and the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC) in its children’s homes in France, collected children’s testimonies more sporadically ... Many of the testimonies were published soon after the war. The regional Jewish Historical Commission in Krakow published excerpts from children’s testimonies and one full testimony, in book form, in 1945. From 1946 onward, the Central Jewish Historical Commission in Munich (lead by Israel Kaplan) published a child survivor’s testimony in each issue of its journal, ''Fun letstn khurbn''...
[[File:1947 Hochberg - Grüss.jpg|thumb|150px]]


* [[Benjamin Tennebaum]], ed., '''Ehad me-ir u shenayim mi-mishpahah: Mivhar m’elef autobigrafiot shel yaldei Yisrael b’Polin''' [One of a City and Two of a Family: A Selection from a Thousand Autobiographies of Jewish Children in Poland] (Merhavyah, Israel: Sifriat Poalim, 1947) <Hebrew>.
Whereas the testimonies collected at Beren-Belsen were not published, three major works devoted to Polish-Jewish children, three anthologies of children’s testimonies, were published in 1947:


* [[Maria Hochberg-Marianskwa]] and [[Noe Grüss]], eds. '''Dzieci Oskarzaja''' (Cracow-Łódź-Warsaw: Central Jewish Historical Commission in Poland, 1947) <Polish>. English tr. '''The Children Accuse''' (London: Vallentine-Mitchell, 1996)
* (a) Benjamin Tenenbaum’s ''Ehad me-ir u shenayim mi-mishpahah'' [One of a City and Two of a Family] (Tel Aviv, Israel), a selection from among some one thousand testimonies;
* (b) ''Dzieci oskarz˙aja'' [The Children Accuse] (Warsaw, Poland), edited by Miryam Hochberg-Marian´ska and Noe Gruss of the Jewish Historical Commission in Poland  
* (c) ''Kinder-martirologye: Zamlung fun dokumentn'' [Children’s Martyrdom: A Document Collection] (Buenos Aires, Argentina), also edited by Noe Gruss.


This most unusual book contains evidence collected by the author in 1945 in Poland from children and teenagers who surfaced from hiding in forests and bunkers and told the story of their survival as it happened. The interviews, expertly translated from the original Polish, document life in the ghettos, the camps, in hiding, in the resistance and in prison. There is also a series of interviews with adults who lived and worked alongside children in wartime Poland.--Publisher description.
--Boaz Cohen, Bar-Ilan University.


* [[Noe Grüss]] (Noah Gris), ed. '''Kinder-martirologye: zamlung fun dokumentn''' [Children’s Martyrdom: A Document Collection] (Buenos Aires [Argentina]: Tsentral-farband fun Poylishe Yidn in Argentine, 1947) <Yiddish>
==== Bibliography ====


"The future of surviving children was a major issue in post-Holocaust Jewish society ... Less known is the fact that correspondingly, much effort was put into listening to the child survivors, recording their stories, and publishing them. By 1947 three anthologies of children’s testimonies were published [in Israel, Poland, and Argentina] bringing to the public the stories of child survivors as they told them." Some children's testimonies were also collected and published in the Yiddish journal ''Fun Lezten Hurban'', the first-ever Holocaust research journal, published in Munich during 1946– 48. The journal was published by the Central Historical Commission in Munich, which was established in December 1945 by the Central Committee for the Liberated Jews in Germany. The commission collected thousands of testimonies from Holocaust survivors in the DP camps, among them hundreds from child survivors of the Holocaust. The drive to collect testimonies from children was initiated by Israel Kaplan (1902–2003), a teacher from Kovno who together with Moshe Feigenboim led the commission. The child survivors and their stories held a strong fascination with Kaplan, whose own child survived the Holocaust in hiding and on the run. Out of hundreds of testimonies collected from child survivors by the staff of the Central Historical Commission during its more than three years of existence, eight were selected for publication in the journal issues."--See [https://cwg1945.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/representing-childrens-Holocaust-2010.pdf Boaz Cohen, Representing Children's Holocaust]
* Boaz Cohen. [https://cwg1945.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/representing-childrens-Holocaust-2010.pdf Representing Children's Holocaust]


==== 1948 ====
* Boaz Cohen. "[https://cwg1945.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/Boaz-Cohen-childrens-voice.pdf The Children’s Voice: Postwar Collection of Testimonies from Child Survivors of the Holocaust]." ''Holocaust and Genocide Studies'' 21. 1 (Spring 2007): 73–95.


[[File:1948 Küchler-Silberman.jpg|thumb|left|150px]]
* Boaz Coen. "[https://cwg1945.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/Boaz-Cohen-Bergen-Belsen-2.pdf ‘And I was only a child’: Children’s Testimonies, Bergen-Belsen 1945]." ''Holocaust Studies: A Journal of Culture and History'' 12.1-2 (2006): 153-169.
[[File:1948 Lena.jpg|thumb|left|150px]]


[[Lena Küchler-Silberman]]. '''Mayne Kinder''' (Paris: Aroysgegebn durkhn Yidishn folksfarband in Frankraykh, 1948) <Yiddish>.


'''My Hundred Children''' (London : Souvenir Press; and  Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1961).
[[Category:Holocaust Children Studies| ]]
 
Also translated into Hebrew (1959).
 
"The author recounts how she led a hundred Jewish orphans out of postwar Poland to safety in Israel"--Publisher description.
 
[[Lena Küchler-Silberman]] (1910-1987) was a Jewish teacher, educator and psychologist. She was born and grew up in Wieliczka, Poland. After completing her studies in the Hebrew gymnasium in Kraków she went on to study philosophy, psychology and pedagogy. During the Holocaust, she lived as a alias outside the Warsaw ghetto, being able to smuggle several children out of the ghetto. After the war, she travelled to the Jewish council in Krakow where she met young children who had lost their families. She took them in, giving them a home in a house she found in Zakopane. From there they made their way to Czechoslovakia, France, and finally, in 1949, Israel.

Latest revision as of 16:40, 22 March 2022

Auschwitz Children.jpg


The page: Holocaust Children Studies Studies--1940s includes (in chronological order) scholarly and literary works in the field of Holocaust Children Studies made in the 1940s, or from 1940 to 1949.


Highlights (1940s)
Highlights (1940s)



1940s.jpg

Holocaust Children Studies : 2020s -- 2010s -- 2000s -- 1990s -- 1980s -- 1970s -- 1960s -- 1950s -- 1940s -- 1930s -- Home

General : 2020s -- 2010s -- 2000s -- 1990s -- 1980s -- 1970s -- 1960s -- 1950s -- 1940s -- 1930s -- 1920s -- 1910s -- 1900s -- 1850s -- 1800s -- 1700s -- 1600s -- 1500s -- 1450s -- Medieval -- Home



Overview

"In the immediate postwar period, thousands of testimonies were taken from Jewish children who survived the Holocaust. These testimonies, many of them in the children’s own handwriting, enable us better to understand the Holocaust experience of Jewish children and provide a unique insight into their world ... The initiators of the collections believed that the testimonies served therapeutic purposes for the children involved, and also broader educational and moral purposes—for example, to focus the world’s attention on the Jewish tragedy

Many collections of children’s testimonies were initiated in the immediate postwar years. Benjamin Tenenbaum (1914–1999), a Polish-born Jewish prewar emigrant to Palestine, traveled to Poland in 1946. With the aid of a few friends, he collected 1,000 “autobiographies” written by surviving Jewish children ... Dr. Helena Wrobel-Kagan, a survivor of Bergen-Belsen, started a school at that camp in late 1945. She asked the children, themselves survivors, to write essays entitled “My Way from Home to the Camp” ... Similarly, the Jewish Historical Commissions in Poland and in the American Zone in Germany focused on children in their effort to collect survivor testimonies. Other Jewish organizations, such as the National Relief Committee for Deportees in Hungary and the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC) in its children’s homes in France, collected children’s testimonies more sporadically ... Many of the testimonies were published soon after the war. The regional Jewish Historical Commission in Krakow published excerpts from children’s testimonies and one full testimony, in book form, in 1945. From 1946 onward, the Central Jewish Historical Commission in Munich (lead by Israel Kaplan) published a child survivor’s testimony in each issue of its journal, Fun letstn khurbn...

Whereas the testimonies collected at Beren-Belsen were not published, three major works devoted to Polish-Jewish children, three anthologies of children’s testimonies, were published in 1947:

  • (a) Benjamin Tenenbaum’s Ehad me-ir u shenayim mi-mishpahah [One of a City and Two of a Family] (Tel Aviv, Israel), a selection from among some one thousand testimonies;
  • (b) Dzieci oskarz˙aja [The Children Accuse] (Warsaw, Poland), edited by Miryam Hochberg-Marian´ska and Noe Gruss of the Jewish Historical Commission in Poland
  • (c) Kinder-martirologye: Zamlung fun dokumentn [Children’s Martyrdom: A Document Collection] (Buenos Aires, Argentina), also edited by Noe Gruss.

--Boaz Cohen, Bar-Ilan University.

Bibliography

Media in category "Holocaust Children Studies--1940s"

The following 18 files are in this category, out of 18 total.