USC Shoah Foundation Releases 'Lala', A VR Film About The Bond Between A Family And Their Dog During The Holocaust

Posted on the 29 September 2017 by Loup Dargent @loup_dargent

"Lala is a remarkable work of art that takes viewers on a emotional journey, no matter their age," said Stephen Smith, the Finci-Viterbi Endowed Executive Director at USC Shoah Foundation. "But it also offers a solution to a problem confronted by many educators: how does one introduce students to the horrors of the Holocaust, genocide and unchecked hatred in a way that is age-appropriate?"

"Lala is a remarkable work of art that takes viewers on a emotional journey, no matter their age," said Stephen Smith, the Finci-Viterbi Endowed Executive Director at USC Shoah Foundation. "But it also offers a solution to a problem confronted by many educators: how does one introduce students to the horrors of the Holocaust, genocide and unchecked hatred in a way that is age-appropriate?"
The Video
SOURCE: USC Shoah Foundation

Roman Kent was born Roman Kniker to Emanuel and Sonia Kniker in Lodz, Poland, on April 18, 1929. In 1939, soon after the Germans invaded Poland, Roman and his family were forced out of their home and had to move into an empty room in the factory that had been confiscated from his father. They were then sent to the Lódz ghetto, where conditions were harsh. In the fall of 1944, the ghetto was liquidated, and the family was deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau. To get transferred, Roman and his brother Leon said they were tradesmen and were sent to Gross-Rosen, and later to Flossenburg. While on a death march en route to Dachau, they were liberated by the U.S. Army. The brothers then traveled to Sweden, where they were reunited with their sisters in a hospital in Lubeck. In June 1946, Roman and Leon immigrated to the United States. After college, the brothers moved to New York and changed their last name to Kent because it was easier to pronounce. Roman met his future wife Hannah in New York, and they were married in 1957. They had two children, Jeffrey and Susan. Roman became involved in Holocaust education and was instrumental in the making ofChildren of the Holocaust, a documentary film dedicated to the memory of the children who died during the Holocaust. At the time of Roman's interview on April 29, 1996 in New York, he and his wife Hannah had two grandchildren, Eryn and Dara.

Eva Freedman was born on July 2, 1934 in Bratislava, Czechoslovakia. By 1941, all Jews had to leave Bratislava and so Eva and her family moved to a nearby town called Nitra. During 1942-1944, all Jews were deported from Nitra. Eva, her mother, her sister Gertie went into hiding with her mother's sisters and family. They were kept in hiding within an apartment building, moving between a room upstairs and a cellar in the basement for about eleven months. They were liberated by Soviet soldiers in early 1945. Around 1946, Eva's eldest sister who had moved to Israel arranged for her family to get permits to live in Israel as well. Years later, she traveled to Ireland, where she learned English and also met her husband, Lennard Freedman, whom she married in December 1959. She had two children, one son, Martin, and one daughter, Allison. She was interviewed in London, England in November 1996.

Helen Fagin was born February 1, 1922 in Radomsko, Poland. In 1939, the German authorities turned the town into a ghetto. Helen, who was seventeen at the time, set up a clandestine school and taught her younger sister and other children. In October 1942, Helen's parents were taken away in a raid while Helen and her two sisters managed to hide. Soon after, Helen's sisters escaped from the ghetto with the help of the underground while Helen remained behind. In January 1943, Helen was selected for deportation when the ghetto was being liquidated, but she managed to escape on the march. With the help of the underground, Helen was able to secure false identity papers. After months of living under a false identity, Helen traveled in Busko, Poland where she was liberated by the Russian Army. After liberation, Helen returned to Radomsko and eventually went to Bad Gastein, Austria, a displaced persons' camp. On May 15, 1947, Helen went to a dance in New York City where she met her future husband, Sidney Fagin. Helen and Sidney got married on November 14, 1948, and had two children, Judith and Gary. Helen received a number of awards for her work promoting tolerance and in 1994, President Clinton invited her to be on the advisory board for the World War II Memorial in Washington D.C. At the time of her interview in 1996, Helen and Sidney lived in Sarasota, Florida.