Nina Lichtenstein
In the end, the yearning for home, or perhaps more specifically to belong, is a shared human condition.
In the end, the yearning for home, or perhaps more specifically to belong, is a shared human condition.
In a small Jewish community, there’s a unifying force that brings Jews from all walks of life together.
As a young woman, she slipped through the cracks of ruthless Paris round-ups, joined the Resistance, and survived the War to become an activist for Sephardic and humanitarian causes worldwide.
When reading about and listening to Sephardic and Mizrahi Jews on what went on in Europe and the camps during WWII, the word “silence” or “silenced” often occurs.