The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

New Holocaust testimonie­s to be screened in New Haven

Screening Thursday at Criterion Cinemas in city

- By Joe Amarante

A Massachuse­tts-made documentar­y based on 80 hours of local Holocaust survivors’ testimonie­s will have a special screening Thursday in New Haven.

“Soul Witness, Brookline Holocaust Witness Project,” began more than 25 years ago when Lawrence Langer conducted about 85 percent of the interviews and supervised the rest. Langer hoped they would be a living memorial based on the testimonie­s, but the tapes were locked away instead, unseen by the general public until now, says producer Harvey Bravman in an email.

“A copy of each interview was supposed to go the Fortunoff Video Archive for Holocaust Testimony at Yale and a copy was supposed to stay in Brookline to be part of a living memorial,” said Bravman in an email. “The living memorial never happened. When I was introduced to the Brookline tapes they had been sitting in a metal closet for over 20 years. I had them digitized and restored before making the film. They had mold and were in bad shape.

“In the process of all of this, we also discovered that Yale had only received copies of 75 percent of the interviews. So in the process of making the film, we worked with the Town of Brookline to deliver the missing interviews that never made it to Yale.”

After several sold-out Boston-area screenings, the completed film will be shown at Bow Tie Criterion Cinemas at 7 p.m. Thursday. The interviews are part of the Fortunoff Archive for Holocaust Testimonie­s at Yale.

Tickets ($25) can be reserved at tickets.bowtiecine­mas.com.

The film is intended for a general audience with an advisory for children under 13.

Mark Skvirsky, vice president of Facing History and Ourselves, said in a release, “This film is important both for the stories that survivors share, but also for the way their voices are presented. The structure and tone of the film ‘humanizes’ these individual­s who might otherwise be perceived simply as victims.”

Witnesses describe their lives before the war, growing intoleranc­e, their lives during the war and the effect their experience­s still had on them at the time of the interviews. Some survived death camps, some hid, others fought in resistance movements and many saved the lives of others, according to the news release.

Following the film, the Fortunoff Video Archive will sponsor a question-andanswer period with the film’s writer, director and producer Bravman, and interview producer Langer.

Bravman said, “These interviews contain some of the most epic and noble words I’ve ever heard. The stories and lessons from those who survived this unimaginab­le tragedy and who bravely shared their experience­s 25 years ago provide an important message for our society. In many cases they talk directly about issues of intoleranc­e, racism and genocide, as well as their immigrant and refugee experience.”

 ?? Courtesy of Harvey Bravman ?? Survivors who were interviewe­d for the Brookline Holocaust Witness Project.
Courtesy of Harvey Bravman Survivors who were interviewe­d for the Brookline Holocaust Witness Project.

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