Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
Abstract: Joanna Beata Michlic sees how much of the attention to child survivor histories can be traced to the experiences of Jewish children after the Holocaust. She criticizes the continuing attempts to draw a narrative of redemption and renewal from this history—and its uses as a paradigm—as simplistic and harmful. Instead, Michlic argues it is important to understand the many vulnerabilities of child survivors, not simply celebrate their success. Accepting the complexities and painful truths pertaining to the Jewish child survivors' biographies uncovers valuable lessons that may be applied to policies directed at today's vulnerable child refugees. Fully examining the experience of young Jewish refugees recognizes that reaching a peaceful Western country to start life anew did not mean that the children instantly transformed themselves into happy individuals. Michlic argues that the multiple scars incurred by war, loss, separation, and the imperative to adapt to a new life are not simply left behind. In the case of Jewish child survivors, these wounds lingered, shaping their identities and memories throughout their lives. It is essential to listen to child survivors' testimonies about the emotional price of losing their families and communities. Invoking the past to understand the present includes being willing to accept history's uneasy, painful, and complex personal realities.
Joanna Michlic (Fri,) studied this question.