11.05.2020 Views

May-Sumner 2020

Inside •Covid-19 Update •FIGHT BACK! Tenants Together/Homes For All •It's a Trump Like Life •Dekkoo Wants Queer Filmmakers •Armed Conflict Location Project US Report •#YouAreEssential Campaign •Letter to the editor Do You Remember An exclusive US. Holocaust Memorial Museum exhibit That Will Make You Gay Cry and more.

Inside
•Covid-19 Update
•FIGHT BACK! Tenants Together/Homes For All
•It's a Trump Like Life
•Dekkoo Wants Queer Filmmakers
•Armed Conflict Location Project US Report
•#YouAreEssential Campaign
•Letter to the editor
Do You Remember An exclusive US. Holocaust Memorial Museum exhibit That Will Make You Gay Cry and more.

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The DDG has obtained exclusive rights to reprint Do You Remember, When<br />

from Permissions Team Office of General Counsel<br />

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum<br />

www.ushmm.org<br />

NEVER AGAIN: WHAT YOU DO MATTERS<br />

The Campaign for the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum<br />

What was it like to live as a young Jew in Berlin during the Nazi deportations? This<br />

exhibition details the life of Manfred Lewin, a young Jew who was active in one of<br />

Berlin’s Zionist youth groups until his deportation to and murder in Auschwitz-Birkenau.<br />

Manfred recorded these turbulent times in a small, hand-made book that he gave to his<br />

Jewish friend and gay companion, Gad Beck. Mr. Beck, a Holocaust survivor who again<br />

lives in Berlin, donated the booklet to the Museum in December 1999. The exhibition<br />

centers around the 17-page artifact, which illustrates the daily life of the two friends, their<br />

youth group, and the culture in which they lived.<br />

To understand why Manfred Lewin, a young Jew in Nazi Berlin, wrote this book in 1941<br />

for his friend Gad Beck—to understand why Gad, 19 and Jewish, risked his life attempting<br />

to save Manfred from deportation—read these words from the play that brought them<br />

together. German writer Friedrich von Schiller’s Don Carlos: No Matter what you plan on<br />

doing, will you promise to undertake no act without your friend? Will you make me this<br />

promise? Friendship, valor, and the fight for freedom were the ideals of this 18th-century<br />

German drama. In 1941, Gad and Manfred played the starring roles in their Jewish youth<br />

group’s reading of the play.<br />

Special thanks to Gad Beck and Jizchak Schwersenz.<br />

Thanks to Carol Brown Janeway for her translation of the German text, and to the Zemer<br />

Chai Choir for the performance of the song “Ba'a menucha layageya.”<br />

Thanks also to:<br />

Beate Kosmala, Zentrum für Antisemitismus-Forschung Berlin<br />

Philipp Reclam jun. Verlag<br />

Friedrich Veitl, Metropol Verlag, Wichern Verlag<br />

Christine Zahn, Jüdisches Museum Berlin<br />

16 Due to closures please contact location first. Some may have delivery options

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