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Title Broken Chain: Catholics Uncover the Holocaust's Hidden Legacy and Discover Their Jewish Roots
About the book By the early
1990s, four thousand Jews remained in Poland, a startling figure considering
3.25 million Jews lived there at the start of World War II. Indeed, of all the
horrors of the Holocaust, Polish Jewry suffered the worst fate. But
miraculously, the Jewish community in Poland has been experiencing a rebirth
over the past decade. The Jewish population there is now estimated at twenty
thousand. This increase is not due to immigration, but to the surfacing of
secrets, family truths that have been buried since the early days of the
Holocaust, when many Jews hid their identity, their religion, and their heritage
in order to survive.
About the author Vera Muller-Paisner is a psychoanalyst and former research consultant for the International Study Group for Trauma, Violence and Genocide at Yale University School of Medicine. She also served as director of training and principal investigator for "Broken Chain," a project in Warsaw, Poland, that offered support and counseling to Gentiles who had recently discovered their Jewish roots. Born in Belgium, she is the daughter of Holocaust survivors and now lives in Stamford, Connecticut.
Contents Introduction. War, Trauma, and Memory. Secrets Unearthed. Learning the Ropes. Agnieska, Felix, and Marek. Double Lives. Identity and Torment for Parent and Child. Forbidden Knowledge. "Broken Chain": The Work Begins. Facing Oneself and One Another. Integrating the Pieces. The Work Revisited: Two Years Later. A Dialogue with the Rabbi of Poland. Understanding Family History. Notes.
ISBN: 0-9728875-7-1 Format: hardcover Price: $19.95 Pages: 128 Trim size: 6x9
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