成人快手

Video summary

Ivor Perl survived Auschwitz-Birkenau as a 12 year old boy. His entire family were deported there. Of his mother, father and eight siblings, only he and his brother Alec survived.

Ivor is returning to Auschwitz with his daughter Judy. It will be the first time that Judy has been to the camp. Growing up, Judy describes the challenge of having a parent who was a survivor and the impact it had on her.

She has asked Ivor to return to Auschwitz in the hope that it can help him, and therefore her, come to terms with the past.

Upon arrival Judy is horrified by Birkenau and what her father went through. She wants him to grieve, for his family and what he endured, so that he can heal and so that she and her siblings can process their own inherited trauma. But Ivor explains that this is too much to ask and that he has his own way of dealing with the pain of the past.

As well as Auschwitz, Ivor survived Allach and Dachau concentration camps.

This clip is from the 成人快手 series, The Last Survivors.

Due to the sensitive nature of the subject matter, we strongly advise teacher viewing before watching with your students.

Back to top

Teacher Notes

Should sites like Auschwitz remain open to the public? Are tours of these sites a good thing?

Can you sympathise with Judy鈥檚 perspective? Are you surprised by the impact that the Holocaust continues to have on the second generation? Discuss what that impact might be.

Do you expect survivors to be emotional?

This short film will be relevant for teaching history at GCSE and above in England, Wales and Northern Ireland and National 4/5 and above in Scotland.

Back to top

Anita Lasker-Wallfisch addresses German Parliament. video

Anita Lasker-Wallfisch addresses German Parliament to caution against forgetting the past. She contemplates as to what difference speaking out as a survivor can make.

Anita Lasker-Wallfisch addresses German Parliament

Maurice Blik confronts the impact of his experiences. video

Maurice Blik confronts the impact of his experiences as a child in Bergen-Belsen, recounting the moment his sister died and how sculpture has helped him to process his trauma.

Maurice Blik confronts the impact of his experiences

Frank Bright recounts the fate of his former classmates. video

Frank Bright discusses his work researching the fate of his former classmates, using a class photograph taken in 1942 which he calls 鈥楻ed for Dead鈥.

Frank Bright recounts the fate of his former classmates

Manfred Goldberg confronts the death of his brother. video

Manfred Goldberg returns to Germany for the first time since he was a child in 1946 to attend a memorial for his family. In doing so, he finally acknowledges the death of his brother.

Manfred Goldberg confronts the death of his brother

Sam Dresner grapples with his memories of the Holocaust. video

Sam Dresner has no photos of his family, who were murdered when he was a boy. He uses art to recreate what they looked like from memory, and to try and process what he saw.

Sam Dresner grapples with his memories of the Holocaust
Back to top