(Jewish Group) U.N. exhibit remembers when the world turned its back on stateless Jewish refugees
In 2017, Deborah Veach went back to Germany, looking for the site of the displaced persons camp where she and her parents had been housed after World War II. They were in suspension, between the lives her parents led in Belarus before they were shattered by the Nazis, and the unknown fate awaiting them as refugees without a country.
To her dismay, and despite the fact that Foehrenwald was one of the largest Jewish DP centers in the American-controlled zone of Germany, she found barely a trace. A complex that once included a yeshiva, a police force, a fire brigade, a youth home, a theater, a post office and a hospital was remembered by almost no one except a local woman who ran a museum in a former bath house.
It was sort of an accident of history that we were there in that particular camp in Germany, of all places, with no ties, no extended family, no place to call home, said Veach, who was born at Foehrenwald in 1949 and lives in New Jersey. Now, they renamed it. They changed the names of all the streets. There is nothing recognizable about the fact that it had been a DP camp.
Veach is part of a now-aging cohort of children born or raised in the DP camps, the last with a first-hand connection to the experience of some 250,000 Jewish survivors who passed through them at the end of the war. To make sure memories of the camps survive them, the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research and the United Nations Department of Global Communications have staged a short-term exhibit, After the End of the World: Displaced Persons and Displaced Persons Camps.
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As piss poor as people's knowledge is regarding the Holocaust, this part of the Holocaust, even many Jews are unaware of it.