The JDC Archives invites you to a webinar: “Impossible Reconstructions: Families After the Holocaust"

Isabelle Rohr Discussion

 Impossible Reconstructions: Families After the Holocaust

 Rebecca Clifford

 Thursday, March 18, 2021, 12:00 PM-1:30PM (EST)

At the end of the Second World War, child survivors of the Holocaust, living in orphanages and children’s colonies across Europe, began to hunt for surviving parents and other relatives. At the same time, parents and other relatives began to search for these lost children. This is well known – but what is less well known is what happened when surviving family members found each other. Surviving parents in many cases did not feel they could provide stable homes for their surviving children, and a considerable number of ‘Jewish war orphans’ living in children’s colonies after the war actually had at least one surviving parent. For other families, life together again proved impossible to maintain, and families reunited only to break apart after a period of months or years. This talk will draw on documents from the JDC archives and oral history with child survivors to explore not only why family reunification proved so difficult in the immediate postwar period, but also how children subjectively experienced such events.

 

Rebecca Clifford is Associate Professor of Modern History at Swansea University. Her most recent book, Survivors: Children's Lives After the Holocaust (Yale, 2020) has been nominated for Britain's top book awards, is on the long list for the Wingate Literary Prize, and was a Telegraph Book of the Year 2020. 

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