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Jewish Hidden Children in Belgium during the Holocaust: A Comparative Study of Their Hiding Places at Christian Establishments, Private Families, and Jewish OrphanagesDecoster, Charlotte 12 1900 (has links)
This thesis compares the different trauma received at the three major hiding places for Jewish children in Belgium during the Holocaust: Christian establishments, private families, and Jewish orphanages. Jewish children hidden at Christian establishments received mainly religious trauma and nutritional, sanitary, and medical neglect. Hiding with private families caused separation trauma and extreme hiding situations. Children staying at Jewish orphanages lived with a continuous fear of being deported, because these institutions were under constant supervision of the German occupiers. No Jewish child survived their hiding experience without receiving some major trauma that would affect them for the rest of their life. This thesis is based on video interviews at Shoah Visual History Foundation and Blum Archives, as well as autobiographies published by hidden children.
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A heuristic study of the meaning of suffering among holocaust survivorsShantall, Hester Maria 06 1900 (has links)
Is there meaning in suffering or ts suffering only a soul-destroying experience from which nothing positive can emerge? In seeking to answer this question, a heuristic study was made of the experiences and views of
the famous Auschwitz survivor, Viktor Frankl, supplemented by an exploration of the life-worlds of
other Nazi concentration camp survivors. The underlying premise was that if meaning can be found in
the worst sufferings imaginable, then meaning can be found in every other situation of suffering.
Seeking to illuminate the views of Frankl and to gain a deeper grasp of the phenomenon of
suffering, the theoretical and personal views of mainstream psychologists regarding the nature of man
and the meaning of hi.~ sufferings were studied. Since the focus of this research was on the suffering of the Holocaust survivor, the Holocaust as the context of the present study, was studied as a crisis of meaning and as psychological adversity. In trying to establish the best way to gain entry into the life-world of the Holocaust survivor, the research methods employed in Holocaust survivor studies were reviewed and, for the purposes of
this study, found wanting. The choice and employment of a heuristic method yielded rich data which illuminated the fact that, through a series of heroic choices Frankl, and the survivors who became research participants,
could attain spiritual triumph in the midst of suffering caused by an evil and inhumane regime. Hitherto unexplored areas of psychological maturity were revealed by these heroes of suffering from which the following conclusions could be drawn:
Man attains the peaks of moral excellence through suffering. Suffering can have meaning.
Suffering can call us out of the moral apathy and mindlesness of mere existence.
The Holocaust, one of the most tragic events in human history, contains, paradoxically, a
challenge to humankind. Resisting the pressure to sink to the level of a brute fight for mere
survival, Frankl and the research participants continued to exercise those human values
important to them and triumphantly maintained their human dignity and self-respect. Evidence
was provided that man has the power to overcome evil with good. / Psychology / D. Litt. et Phil. (Psychology)
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A heuristic study of the meaning of suffering among holocaust survivorsShantall, Hester Maria 06 1900 (has links)
Is there meaning in suffering or ts suffering only a soul-destroying experience from which nothing positive can emerge? In seeking to answer this question, a heuristic study was made of the experiences and views of
the famous Auschwitz survivor, Viktor Frankl, supplemented by an exploration of the life-worlds of
other Nazi concentration camp survivors. The underlying premise was that if meaning can be found in
the worst sufferings imaginable, then meaning can be found in every other situation of suffering.
Seeking to illuminate the views of Frankl and to gain a deeper grasp of the phenomenon of
suffering, the theoretical and personal views of mainstream psychologists regarding the nature of man
and the meaning of hi.~ sufferings were studied. Since the focus of this research was on the suffering of the Holocaust survivor, the Holocaust as the context of the present study, was studied as a crisis of meaning and as psychological adversity. In trying to establish the best way to gain entry into the life-world of the Holocaust survivor, the research methods employed in Holocaust survivor studies were reviewed and, for the purposes of
this study, found wanting. The choice and employment of a heuristic method yielded rich data which illuminated the fact that, through a series of heroic choices Frankl, and the survivors who became research participants,
could attain spiritual triumph in the midst of suffering caused by an evil and inhumane regime. Hitherto unexplored areas of psychological maturity were revealed by these heroes of suffering from which the following conclusions could be drawn:
Man attains the peaks of moral excellence through suffering. Suffering can have meaning.
Suffering can call us out of the moral apathy and mindlesness of mere existence.
The Holocaust, one of the most tragic events in human history, contains, paradoxically, a
challenge to humankind. Resisting the pressure to sink to the level of a brute fight for mere
survival, Frankl and the research participants continued to exercise those human values
important to them and triumphantly maintained their human dignity and self-respect. Evidence
was provided that man has the power to overcome evil with good. / Psychology / D. Litt. et Phil. (Psychology)
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