The Quarrel. Undzere Kinder (Our Children). Under the Domim Tree. The Summer of Aviyah. Jeux Interdits (Forbidden Games).

Attempting to re-present the unthinkable: the Shoah in film –

Workshops/Screenings/Discussions:

2000 Annual Meeting of the American Psychiatric Association. Chicago, IL

2001 Annual Meeting of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law. Boston, MA

2002 Undzere Kinder” workshop: Annual Meeting of the American Psychiatric Association. Philadelphia, PA

2003 Annual Meeting of the American Psychiatric Association. San Francisco, CA

May 2004 Annual Meeting of the American Psychiatric Association. New York City, NY

June 2004Undzere Kinder” workshop: International Congress of Psychic Trauma and Traumatic Stress/Congreso Internacional de Trauma Psíquico y Estrés Traumático. Buenos Aires, Argentina

May 2005 «Jeux Interdits» (Forbidden Games). Annual Meeting of the American Psychiatric Association. Atlanta, GA.

July 2005 “Undzere Kinder” workshop: 44th Congress of the International Psychoanalytical Association. Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. (click here for a summary).

July 2006 “Undzere Kinder” workshop: WPA Congress, Istanbul, Turkey

 

Related Links:

The following provides a link to extremely disturbing still images from Der ewige Jude, the 1940 German movie that was shown in Germany and translated, in all German-occupied countries.

Der ewige Jude (The Eternal Jew) marks the transition from representing the Jewish people as a pariah among the nations to harmful vermin to be exterminated.

The film and its content were programmatic for what followed, the Shoah, the spoliation and subsequent annihilation of the Jewish population in most European countries occupied by Germany.

 

The Origins of the Nuremberg Code

The first report on the former concentration camp Bergen Belsen (near Hamburg in Northern Germany, British-occupied since Germany’s defeat) appeared in the medical press shortly after the Allied victory over Germany in the spring of 1945.

 

 

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