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NEWSLETTER | March 2, 2023


THIS WEEK A Holocaust survivor's daughter recalls the six weeks they sheltered from Russian troops. Plus guideposts to a history of book blurbs, alligators in the sewers and other surprises from history.
VIRTUAL EVENT

1938 Vanda Vasil’eva with her parents, Maria and Semen, in Mariupol, Ukraine. (Photo: USC Shoah Foundation)

A Holocaust Survivor's Daughter Recalls Their Peril in Ukraine 


As a child in Mariupol, Ukraine, 11-year-old Vanda Vasil’eva hid from the invading German army during World War II, surviving extermination in the Holocaust by bullets, which took the lives of an estimated 1.5 million Ukrainian Jews. Decades later Vanda was again dislocated by war. She died at 91, sheltering in a Mariupol basement during an attack by Russian soldiers. 

In an interview with Elise Lieberman, who acted as a translator for Retro Report, Larysa Hryshchenko, Vanda's daughter, recalled the time she and her mother spent in hiding while their city was under attack. "We lived in the basement of a store for a long time," she said. "it was scary, they were shooting our neighborhood."

"The whole time my mother asked what was happening, what had happened, and we couldn’t answer her," she said. "We were without water, without anything, but the hardest part was being without information."

In the six weeks they spent in the basement shelter, they faced daily struggles to find warmth, food and water. "Many people died because there was not medical aid," she said. "If it had been warm, if we had had medical aid, Mom would have survived."

When Larysa emerged from the shelter, she discovered that their house had been destroyed by a missile. "I don’t know how things were during World War II, but my mother said now was worse, because at least then our home survived," she said. 

Larysa was evacuated with other refugees to a hotel in Frankfurt. Nursing homes across the country, with the backing of the German government, have opened their doors to house the survivors. But she holds onto hope that someday, she will be able to return to Ukraine.  "The Germans received us and treated us well, thank you to them," she said. "But everyone has their homeland. We are waiting for peace, quickly."

Retro Report’s short documentary, below, made with PBS Newshour, traces Ukrainian Holocaust survivors' perilous journey to safety and confrontation with the past. Rebecca Liss, the producer of the film, recently spoke with Dr. Edna Friedberg, a historian at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, about how today’s war has shattered the lives of Ukraine’s Holocaust survivors. You can watch the conversation on the Museum’s Facebook and YouTube pages. 

VIDEO In Ukraine, elderly Jewish citizens threatened by the war with Russia are being evacuated.
CURATED

1980 In the film "Alligator," a discarded pet survives in Chicago's sewers by feeding on the carcasses of animals used in illegal experimentation, eventually growing into a perpetually ravenous 36-foot monster.

Retro Report Recommends . . . 


The Retro Report team suggests articles, podcasts and videos that interest, impress and inspire us. Do you have a pick you'd like to share? Let us know: news@retroreport.com

. . . Reflecting on nuclear weapons
In an opinion essay in The Atlanta Journal Constitution, former Senator Sam Nunn writes: "There are all sorts of ways you could have a blunder from a large buildup. You could get a war that no one really intended and it could happen very quickly.” [AJC.com]

. . . Compliments where they are due
Book blurbs were used in publishing long before they had a name. One of the earliest examples, written by Ralph Waldo Emerson, appeared on the jacket of Walt Whitman’s Leaves of Grass in 1855. The blurb reads: “I greet you at the beginning of a great career, RW Emerson.”  Few writers decline to write a blurb for a book when asked, because the blurb is as much an advertisement for the blurber as it is an endorsement of the book. Author Gary Shteyngart has claimed to have blurbed over 150 books. Whose idea was this? [The Millions]

. . . Checking under manhole covers
An emaciated alligator was found swimming in a Brooklyn park last month, fueling a century-old rumor about alligators roaming wild in New York City sewers. The myth may have begun in 1935, when an eight-foot alligator was discovered in a storm drain in East Harlem, one of several such sightings all over New York City. According to a New York Times report, five alligators were captured in Brooklyn and Staten Island in 2018 and 2019. The 1980 movie "Alligator," above, about a ravenous 36-foot reptile stalking Chicago, fed the legend. Urban alligator lore will be the subject of a slideshow lecture, "The Gators of Gotham: The History of Alligators in (and Under) New York City," hosted by Michael Miscione, the former Manhattan borough historian. Tickets for the event, which will be held on March 15, are $22. [Time Out New York]

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LAST WORD


“I raise up my voice — not so I can shout but so that those without a voice can be heard... we cannot succeed when half of us are held back.”


— Malala Yousafzai
2014 Nobel Peace Prize laureate
 
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