Bernard Offen
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bernard Offen was born in 1929 in Cracow. He survived the Krakow Ghetto and several Nazi concentration camps.
His parents, two brothers and one sister lived in the Podgórze area of Cracow which in March 1941 became the Krakow Ghetto. His mother, Rochme Gittel Schiffer, and his sister Miriam were deported, probably to Belzec, where they where murdered. Bernard survived the Nazi concentration camps of Plaszow, Julag, Mauthausen, Auschwitz-Birkenau, and Dachau. During this time he was separated first from his two brothers Sam and Natan and later also from his father how was murdered in Auschwitz-Birkenau. After the war Bernard reunited with his two brothers. [1]
In 1951 the Offen brothers decided to emigrate the the United States. In 1981 Bernard returned to Poland for the first time since the war to confront the demons of his past. From 1991 on Bernard began to spend his summers in Cracow dealing with the past through what he calls “process of healing”. He started taking people on tours of the former ghetto, Plaszow and Auschwitz-Birkenau. His experiences Bernard documented in four movies.
Austrian Holocaust Memorial Servants (Gedenkdieners) serving their Memorial Service in Krakow cooperate frequently with Bernard Offen and take part in his walks to the ghetto area and Plaszow camp.
Contents |
[edit] Filmography
- The Work (1983) [2]
- My Hometown Concentration Camp (1997) [3]
- Process B-7815 (1999) [4]
- Hawaii and the Holocaust (2004)
[edit] Synopses of Bernard Offen's Films
- Plot Summary of *The Work* (1983)
- Plot Summary of *Process B-7815: My Auschwitz Tattoo Number* (1999)
- Plot Summary of *My Hometown Concentration Camp: Walk in the Krakow Ghetto and Plaszow Camp* (1997)
[edit] References
- ^ Sam Offen, "When Hope Prevails: The Personal Triumph of a Holocaust Survivor", May 2005, ISBN 1-928623-58-1
- ^ The Work. Dir. Bernard Offen. Perf. Bernard Offen. DVD. www.Bernardoffen.org, 1983. 37 minutes.
- ^ My Hometown Concentration Camp: Walk in the Krakow Ghetto and Plaszow Camp. Dir. Bernard Offen. Perf. Bernard Offen. DVD. www.Bernardoffen.org, 1997. 23 minutes.
- ^ Process B-7815: My Auschwitz Tattoo Number. Dirs. Bernard Offen, Hendrik John. Perf. Bernard Offen. Music. Herwig Strobl, Bernard Offen. Cinematography. Hendrik John. DVD. www.Bernardoffen.org, 1999. 99 minutes.
[edit] External links
- The Official Website of Bernard Offen
- Clips from Bernard's Documentaries on BernardOffenTV
- The Work at the Internet Movie Database
- Process B-7815 at the Internet Movie Database