“Much work remains to be done to eliminate racism and antisemitism and the realization of an inclusive society for all. CHES is actively seeking partners for participating in such work.” – Mina Cohn, Director, Centre for Holocaust Education and Scholarship
Realizing that the weight of teaching the Holocaust poses challenges for educators and students helped us to focus the rationale and develop the following goal for the project: to document and preserve the testimonies of Ottawa Holocaust survivors as primary sources of oral history mediated through film and with broad online access.
Our hope is that the testimonies will allow future generations of students, researchers, teachers, and others to hear and see the people who experienced and witnessed the genocidal policies and crimes of the Nazis and their collaborators.
Following a lengthy process of interviews and recordings, the testimonials were edited into ten 25 – 30 minute films designed for use in a classroom setting. Each testimony is also available in a 2-3 minute abridged version.
Since they were produced, the films have been used widely, especially by teachers, researchers, and in university settings in Ottawa and beyond.
Antisemitism – prejudice and hatred of Jews — existed in Europe for generations before Hitler came to power. The Holocaust has its roots in a long history of hatred of Jews. With the rise of Nazism antisemitism became an instrument of the deliberate policy to murder all of Europe’s Jews.
In Germany restrictions and discrimination against the Jews grew with the rise of Hitler to power in 1933. After that the situation of the Jews deteriorated rapidly and following Kristallnacht in 1938 the atrocities increased.
The experience of Jews elsewhere in Europe varied during the Holocaust, depending on whether and when the country in which they lived was occupied by the Nazis, whether their country was an ally of Nazi Germany, as well as various other circumstances.
The half hour short films presented here detail the survivors’ experiences before, during, and after the Holocaust. The testimonials include different survival experiences in different parts of Europe: surviving ghettos in Hungary, Nazi slave labor camps in Germany, Nazi death camps in Poland, hiding in non-Jewish homes in Holland and France, hiding in a dugout in the Ukraine, and surviving as refugees in Romania and Shanghai.
Each story is unique and offers a glimpse into what it must have been like to live through the traumatic events of the Holocaust. The films are testimonies based on the survivors’ personal experience. They have been reviewed to ensure historical accuracy and are intended to be used as pedagogical tools”.
Elly Bollegraaf
Elly Bollegraaf, born in 1940 in Amsterdam, Netherlands. Survived as a hidden child in the south of Holland.
Tova Clark
Tova Clark, born in 1939 in Opeln, Germany. Child survivor, survived in Shanghai, China.
Jessica Fiksel
Vera Gara
Vera Gara, born in 1933 in Vienna, Austria. Child survivor, survived the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp.
Dr. Agnes Klein, MD
Dr. Agnes Klein, MD, born in 1937 in Brasov, Romania. Child survivor, survived on a farm in Romania.
Raoul Korngold
Raoul Korngold, born in 1936 in Strasbourg, France. Child survivor, survived under false identity in France.
Cantor Kraus
Kati Morrison
Kati Morrison, born in 1940, Budapest, Hungary. Child survivor, survived in a safe house and in Budapest Ghetto.
David Moskovic
David Moskovic, born in 1929 in Koňuš, Czechoslovakia. Survived Bunalager (Buna) slave labor camp and Buchenwald concentration camp.
Judy Young Drache
Judy Young Drache, born in 1943 in Budapest, Hungary. Child survivor, survived as a hidden baby in Budapest.