Liberation: my hell began after the war -- Our greatest treasures: America responds -- In America: war orphans find home -- No happy endings: postwar reconstituted families -- Growing up in America: lingering memories and the US context -- Where was God? Faith and doubt among child survivors -- Finding a voice for our silence: claiming identity as child survivors -- Conclusion: memory is the arena of healing: the road to repair.
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Over ninety percent of Europe's 1.5 million Jewish children were murdered during the Holocaust, but a tiny fragment of about 150,000 children survived. Cohen traces the postwar lives of these children, shedding new light on the way their experiences and perceptions both during and after the war shadowed and shaped their lives through adulthood.
JSTOR
22573/ctt1vdbrj3
Holocaust survivors-- Rehabilitation-- United States.