Hélène Berr, a Stolen Life Exposition in Boca Raton, Florida, USA

Wednesday December 21st, 2016Saturday February 11th, 2017

Jean et Hélène à Aubergenville

Jean and Hélène in Aubergenville

Hélène Berr was 21 years old in 1942. A Parisian student at the Sorbonne, she kept her diary from April 1942 to February 1944. This text, of an exceptional literary quality, mixes the daily experience of the unbearable and the dreamed world of letters, alternating at every moment between hope and despair.

Arrested on 8 March 1944, she was deported to Auschwitz with her father and mother. She survived almost to the end of the ordeal, succumbing to exhaustion at Bergen-Belsen in April 1945, five days before the camp was liberated.

The exhibition, going beyond the strict framework of Hélène Berr’s diary and personality, extends to the context of the Occupation and its persecution of Jews in France. It offers the opportunity to discover the original manuscript of this journal published in 2008, as well as many family archives deposited at the Shoah Memorial.

MORE INFORMATION

Florida Atlantic University

777 Glades Rd
Boca Raton, FL 33431
www.fau.edu

Hélène Berr, a Stolen Life Exhibition in Boca Raton, Florida

Wednesday December 21st, 2016Saturday February 11th, 2017

This exhibition is based on the journal written by Hélène Berr, a young French woman Jewish whose promising future was brutally cut short by the Vichy Government’s laws and the plan of extermination imagined by the Nazis. Studying English Literature at the Sorbonne University, Helene Berr was 21 years old when she started her journal. We follow her steps through Paris under the German occupation, perceiving the daily experience of the unbearable, oscillating between hope and despair, until her arrest and deportation to Auschwitz in 1944.

While revealing a true premonition of the inescapable, this subtle testimony is exceptionally poetic, has rare literary qualities, and carries a universal dimension that regards and questions every human being with sincerity. The exhibition however goes beyond the framework of Helene Berg’s journal and personality, as it broadens the context of the Occupation and addresses largely the persecution of the Jews in France. With the support of photographs, archives, films, interactive animations and maps, this exhibition shows how the daily lives of Jews had been impacted by these terrible acts of violence.

Inauguration

Monday, January 9, 2017 at 6pm

In attendance
Dr. Steven D. Roper, Executive Director, Peace, Justice and Human Rights Initiative, Office of the Provost, Florida Atlantic University
Linda Medvin, Mr. Ed., Director, Center for Holocaust and Human Rights Education, Florida Atlantic University
Stéphanie Menaud-Gougain, Head of Political Affairs and Communication, Consulate General of France in Miami
Jacques Fredj, Executive Director, Shoah Memorial

INVITATION (PDF) 

RSVP by January 6 at deborah.farnault@memorialdelashoah.org

Complimentary parking on January 9, 5–9pm at Parking Garage 2

Workshop

Friday, January 6, 2017, from 8:30am–3:30pm

History of the Jews in France under the Vichy Regime

Participating teachers will receive a Certificate of Attendance and Course Completion Form for five and a half (5.5) contact hours.

SCHEDULE

RSVP by January 4 at deborah.farnault@memorialdelashoah.org

This exhibition was designed, created, and distributed by the Mémorial de la Shoah in Paris, France (curators Karen Taieb and Sophie Nagiscarde), with the guidance of Mariette Job (niece of Hélène Berr), and made possible through the generous support of SNCF.

This presentation was made possible through the support of the Consulate General of France in Miami, the Embassy of France in the United States, and SNCF.

Picture: Portrait of Hélène Berr © Shoah Memorial, Mariette Job Collection

Free admission

Florida Atlantic University
Center for Holocaust and Human Rights Education

Parliament Hall
777 Glades Rd
Boca Raton, FL 33431