Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Separated Jewish family crux of ‘Lucky Ones’

- ALICIA RANCILIO

In Hulu’s limited-series “We Were the Lucky Ones, ” the Kurc family in Poland is separated during World War II and spends years trying to reunite. This was before the internet and cellphones so tracking one another’s whereabout­s was hard.

It’s based on a nonfiction book of the same name by Georgia Hunter, who wrote about her own family’s story. As a teenager, Hunter discovered her late-grandfathe­r Eddy, (who had changed his name from Addy), along with his parents and siblings — were Holocaust survivors.

Logan Lerman, who plays Hunter’s grandfathe­r, says the character’s story resembles his own. Addy escaped to South America during the war and built a life in Brazil, while Lerman’s family went to China.

“My grandfathe­r was a refugee with his family,” Lerman said. “He fled Germany in the late 1930s and ended up on this long journey similar to my character. He ended up in Shanghai with his parents and sister because I guess it was one of the countries that was letting Jews in at the time. Addy also had a long journey as a refugee, seeking a country that would let them in.”

It took years for Hunter to trace the Kurcs’ lineage. “We Were the Lucky Ones” serves as a reminder to learn your family’s history.

Joey King, who plays youngest daughter Halina, values having a close relationsh­ip with her grandmothe­r and says they are “thick as thieves.” King says her ancestry and heritage have “always been such an open conversati­on.”

“There wasn’t ever a moment that I learned about the Holocaust that I can recall. It was just something that was always talked about in my home. When you grow up in a Jewish family, it’s not this defining moment in school where they’re like, ‘And this is the Holocaust.’ I knew about it well before we learned about it in school.”

When it comes to sharing accounts of the Holocaust, not every survivor wants to go into detail about their experience­s.

“They had to go through such horror and such dark times,” said Michael Aloni, who plays Selim, husband to Kurc sibling Mila. “Some did not say a word about what they went through. They just continued with their lives and that was their victory.”

Don M. Fox, a historian and author, says many former WWII combat veterans also keep that part of their life to themselves.

Communicat­ion is so vital to sharing knowledge, and the National WWII Museum now uses AI for an exhibit that allows visitors to have virtual conversati­ons with photograph­s of veterans.

When speaking with actual Holocaust survivors or former military members, Fox suggests approachin­g the conversati­on with open-ended questions.

“I would start out by saying, ‘I know that you were in Europe during the Second World War. Can you tell me what that was like?’ or ‘If you don’t mind, start from the beginning when you first became aware of what was happening around you.’”

Even if your relatives are no longer alive, Henry Lloyd-Hughes, who plays oldest sibling Genek Kurc, points out that, like Hunter, anyone can do research.

“It’s not always a question of listening,” he said. “There are diaries and photos in attics with stories in everyone’s family that someone might not be (aware of).”

Sam Woolf says portraying Halina’s boyfriend and later husband on the series led him to dig into his own background. “I’ve had so many more conversati­ons with my mother since,” he said. While filming in Poland, the Britain born-and-raised actor was able to visit a nearby town where his grandfathe­r was born and found his birth certificat­e. It’s made Woolf want to honor his Polish heritage.

“Now I’m applying for Polish citizenshi­p,” he said. “It was this sort of knitting together of informatio­n I’ve never had because you often don’t think to ask and then sometimes it’s too late. I lost all my grandparen­ts quite young at 13 or 14. I could have asked. You never get that opportunit­y back.”

Earlier this year, a study released by the New York-based Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, known as the Claims Conference, reported about 245,000 survivors are still living across more than 90 countries.

Kurc family matriarch Nechuma is portrayed by Robin Weigert, who admits to carrying guilt about the sobering fact that Holocaust survivors are dying.

“There are Holocaust stories in my family that I will never know. My (grandfathe­r) had relatives. I don’t know their names. I don’t think my father ever heard about them. I regret every single conversati­on I didn’t have,” she said.

Recently, the Claims Conference announced a global initiative to combat antisemiti­sm by using Holocaust survivors’ stories as a way to educate.

“There’s a difference between reading something in a history book or on Wikipedia, and talking to a human being who actually went through (the Holocaust),” said Hadas Yaron, who plays Selim’s wife, Mila.

 ?? (The Associated Press/Damian Dovarganes) ?? Logan Lerman (from left), Robin Weigert, Michael Aloni, Hadas Yaron, Joey King, Sam Woolf, Henry Lloyd-Hughes and Amit Rahav star in Hulu’s “We Were The Lucky Ones.”
(The Associated Press/Damian Dovarganes) Logan Lerman (from left), Robin Weigert, Michael Aloni, Hadas Yaron, Joey King, Sam Woolf, Henry Lloyd-Hughes and Amit Rahav star in Hulu’s “We Were The Lucky Ones.”

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