The Jewish Chronicle

The Tattooist of Auschwitz stars pay visit to Holocaust survivors

- BY ELIANA JORDAN

▶ STARS AND producers of the upcoming Sky TV series The Tattooist of Auschwitz visited Jewish Care’s Holocaust Survivors’ Centre (HSC) in Golders Green, where they shared a moving afternoon hearing the stories of survivors of the Shoah.

The TV series, based off the eponymous novel by Heather Morris, tells the real-life story of Slovakian Jewish prisoner Lali Sokolov, who was tasked with tattooing ID numbers on inmates at Auschwitz. Through interviews with Sokolov in his elder years, Morris traced the central love story between Lali and fellow Jewish prisoner Gita Furman as they fought to keep one another alive.

Actors Jonah Hauer-King (Lali), Mela nie Lynskey (Heather Morris), Anna Próchniak (Gita) and Jonas Nay (Officer Stefan Baretzki), along with executive producer Claire Mundell and director Tali Shalom-Ezer, heard the harrowing first-hand accounts of Holocaust survivors at the HSC ahead of the release of the six-part series on 2 May.

Ivor Weider, 92, shared traumatic memories from his time at Auschwitz, where he was deported from Romania aged just 12. Miriam Freedman, 89, who survived the Holocaust by going into hiding as a child, shared with the cast that she also came from Bratislava in Slovakia, where Lali came from and felt a strong connection to his story. Following the visit, Holocaust survivor and centre member Ivor Perl BEM, 92, who was taken at the age of 12 from Hungary to Auschwitz-Birkenau, said: “After all these years and with all that’s happening in the world today regarding acceptance of other people, it’s been an honour to meet some of the actors, the director and producer and I wish them all the best of luck with this project.”

HSC outreach coordinato­r Sarah-Jane Burstein added: “It was our great privilege to host the cast and key creatives from the series. It was an incredibly memorable, moving and unique encounter for everyone involved. Survivors spoke openly about their deeply harrowing experience­s in Auschwitz.

“The conversati­on and exchange were empowering for everyone involved, as we listened to the group of young actors who have taken on their roles in this production with such sensitivit­y and deep responsibi­lity to ensure these stories are never forgotten.”

More than 250 Holocaust survivors and refugees are supported by the HSC.

 ?? PHOTO: ADAM LAWRENCE ?? Inspiring: actor Jonah Hauer-King with Ivor Perl BEM
PHOTO: ADAM LAWRENCE Inspiring: actor Jonah Hauer-King with Ivor Perl BEM

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