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Broken Chain: Catholics Uncover the Holocaust's Hidden Legacy and Discover Their Jewish Roots

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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. Vera Muller-Paisner, a psychoanalyst who specializes in the transmission of trauma, became interested in this hidden legacy of the Holocaust and traveled to Poland to investigate this phenomenon and understand the impact it had on both the individual and family. She had many questions. What happens when these long-held secrets—hidden from spouses and children—are finally revealed? What is it like to consider yourself a part of “us” one day, only to discover the next you're really one of “them”? How do you cope? What becomes of your identity? She found such questions to be especially salient given Poland's anti-Semitic past and present. Herself a daughter of Jewish Holocaust survivors from Poland, Muller-Paisner was uniquely qualified to undertake this exploration. She relates her experiences—and the answers she found—in this compelling volume. Many of her findings come directly from support groups she initiated in Warsaw for Gentiles who had recently discovered their Jewish roots. The stories she shares from her interviews and group sessions are both heartbreaking and heartwarming, offering us a glimpse into the lives of those who “discover.” And like those she went to help, she has struggled with her family's own hidden secrets. She speaks candidly about this and her internal dilemma about setting foot in a land that violently took so many members of her own family.

128 pages, Hardcover

First published September 15, 2005

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Vera Muller-Paisner

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1,248 reviews112 followers
October 10, 2015
A curious and interesting book. The author grew up in a family in America not knowing much about his parents history in Europe. Unbeknownst to her, her parents re-invented themselves in America in an effort to leave their experiences with the holocaust behind them. She grew up knowing their holes in her parents past they didn't want to let her know about. She came to find out as she grew older about family member's killed and some of her parent's experiences. But, what about people that weren't told anything about their mother or father going thru the holocaust or even of being Jewish? Secrets have power and how we see who we are frames our entire lives.

This book is written about people in the US and in Poland who didn't know they were Jewish and how finding out impacted them and to some degree, society in Poland. A great follow on to reading about the holocaust in Poland and how things have changed with the fall of the Iron Curtain. The Jewish population was nearly eradicated in Poland in WWII. The identified Jewish population numbers changed from about 4,000 in the early 90s to over 20,000 in just a couple years as people found out they were Jewish and it became more socially acceptable to own up to being Jewish.
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