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86

in Lodz, Poland. An anonymous Nazi
cameraman took the silent black-and-
white film. "It's precious film, and
shows how the Jewish people suffered
in the ghetto," said Raven in an inter-
view. "I obtained it from the Bait
Lohamie Hagetabot — the Ghetto
Fighters' House in Poland."
Ravett has made six films reflecting
on how the Holocaust affected his
family, and all have been screened
internationally.
Part of In Memory, showing the
events in Lodz, is framed with the
repeated chant of the Yizkor prayer Eyl
Maley Rahamim, performed by Cantor
Schlorno Barnoun of Congregation
B'nai Israel in Northhampton, Mass.
The prayer is translated into English
on the screen.
Another one of Raven's Holocaust
films, The March; will be showri at 9:30
p.m. Thursday. The core of this intense,
25-minute movie is a series of informal
conversations with his mother over 13
years (from 1984-1997), centering
around one topic: her recollections of
the 1945 Death March from Auschwitz.
Each time, through the years,
Ravett asks: "Mom, what do you
remember about the March?" The
complexity of her responses, the visi-
ble emotional toll experienced with
each reply and the portrait of her
aging process are vivid. Her hesitations
and the often raw sound quality serve

Documentary filmmaker Abraham
Ravett interviewed his mother about
her recollections of the 1945
Death March from Auschwitz
for his film, "The March."

to suggest the pain and cost
of remembering.
As World War II was end-
ing, Soviet troops were about
to liberate several concentra-
tion camps in Poland. The
German High Command
ordered the evacuation of
Auschwitz, Birkenau and
Monowitz. Inmates were
forced to march in mid-winter
for hundreds of miles to other
destinations.
Testimony from survivors
indicates that tens of thou-
sands were shot and killed
along the way. Said a survivor:
'Anybody who had to sit
down for a few minutes was
shot." Those who were too
weak to start the March, were
shot in the camps.
Raven's parents in
Auschwitz survived the March.
His father, who died in 1979,
never spoke about it. But his
mother continuously made
references to the "miracle" of
their survival, and told Raven
in vivid detail what it was like to walk
for miles in the bitter cold with just a
blanket and a pair of wooden shoes

(trepches).
In the film, she tells the story of
how, one night, when the inmates were
allowed to rest at a farm, she found a
small pack of sugar cubes in a hay loft,
which kept her and a companion
going. She recalls how the German sol-
diers would confront a weakened
inmate who paused for a moment's rest
with the shout: "Karst du lofen?" (Can

