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INGE
FRANKEN
Berlin Nominated by Carole Vogel, Lexington, MA After working for six years on a book about Jewish orphans in World War II, Inge Franken can explain what motivated her in a single breath. "I did it for the survivors who gave me their life stories," she says. The daughter of
a Nazi officer she never knew, Franken also suffered the consequences
of the Holocaust. Her grandfather and her father, who was killed at
the siege of Leningrad when she was two, were both "big Nazi believers"-though
it took Franken many years, and reading many of her father's wartime
letters, to find this out. Instead, she recalls, she grew up with her
mother and sister in a painful, stifled atmosphere of silence. "Nobody
[in my family] talked about the time before," she says. "But
I knew we belonged to them-to the people who did terrible things." "You have a big stone on your back and when you can say 'Yes, my parents were the perpetrators,' it becomes so much easier," says Franken, who in 1996 started arranging monthly discussions at One by One, an organization in Berlin that invites the relatives of Holocaust victims and perpetrators together to share experiences and stories. "When we can cry together, we can laugh together. It's the best connection you can have: when you talk about the deepest thing you both belong to. If I didn't talk about this, it would be my guilt. But when I talk about it, the feelings of sadness and guilt belong to my parents." It was the same community center, in fact, where Franken organized those meetings that she discovered had once been a children's home from which dozens of Jewish orphans were deported, in 1942, to their deaths. Diving into research about the building's past, Franken tracked down rare Nazi-era pictures of the home's orphans taken by the Jewish photographer Abraham Pisarek; plumbed Jewish archives throughout the Berlin and Brandenburg regions; and corresponded with Holocaust survivors in Israel to piece together the stories of dozens of lives-and deaths-connected with the Kinderheim. In 2005, she published her findings in the book, "Gegen das Vergessen: Erinnerungen an das Jüdische Kinderheim Fehrbelliner Strasse 92, Berlin Prenzlauer Berg" (Against Forgetting: Memories of the Jewish Children's Home, Fehrbelliner Strasse 92 Berlin-Prenzlauer Berg). Franken, though, is making a stronger impression on children these days not from writing but from the energetic, One by One presentations she takes to dozens of schools around the country, mostly in the former East. Accompanied by one of a number of Jewish friends who play her counterpart in the victim-perpetrator dialogue, Franken has reached out to hundreds of German youths in a way that nobody ever did before. "She talks to students about choices," says Carole Vogel, a descendent of Holocaust survivors who has participated in many of Franken's school presentations. "[She tells them] to be wary of strong leaders, to be sceptical of popular viewpoints. She challenges children to make their own choices about what is right and wrong-she makes kids think." Along the way-in
the eastern state of Brandenburg, for example-some students and even
teachers have shown resistance to Franken's work, accusing her of betraying
her family's and her country's past. And those are the people, Franken
says, she needs to reach the most. "I admire Inge's courage," says Alexa Dvorson, an American journalist living in Berlin and a member of One by One, "not only for having the perseverance to follow through her projects, but the inner courage it takes to delve into the feelings and prejudices that people who lived during the Nazi period grew up with, and often never consciously dealt with." More recently, Franken has been working with teenagers to install a series of Stolpersteine-the brass-plated cobblestone memorials known as Stumbling Stones-in the streets around the former Prenzlauer Berg children's home, which will commemorate Jewish individuals and families who once lived there and perished in the camps. Her priority, though, seems clear: to keep visiting schools and delivering her message to as many kids in Germany as possible. "The most important
thing I tell them is: Ask questions. Ask about your background. What
did your parents do, your grandparents, what is your family's story?
Most of them say, 'I don't know.' So, I ask them, 'You have a grandfather?
Try to talk with him. Try to find out.'" |
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