From PBS:
“THE U.S. AND THE HOLOCAUST”
THE U.S. AND THE HOLOCAUST, a new
three-part, six-hour series directed and produced by Ken Burns, Lynn Novick and
Sarah Botstein, explores America’s response to one of the greatest humanitarian
crises of the 20th century. The series will air September 18, 19 and 20, at
8-10 p.m. ET (check local listings) on PBS stations, and all three episodes
will stream the night of premiere on PBS.org and the PBS Video app.
Inspired in part by the United
States Holocaust Memorial Museum’s “Americans and the Holocaust” exhibition and
supported by its historical resources, the film examines the rise of Hitler and
Nazism in Germany in the context of global antisemitism and racism, the
eugenics movement in the United States and race laws in the American south. The
series, written by Geoffrey Ward, sheds light on what the U.S. government and
American people knew and did as the catastrophe unfolded in Europe.
Combining the first-person
accounts of Holocaust witnesses and survivors and interviews with leading
historians and writers, THE U.S. AND THE HOLOCAUST dispels competing myths that
Americans either were ignorant of the unspeakable persecution that Jews and
other targeted minorities faced in Europe or that they looked on with callous
indifference. The film tackles a range of questions that remain essential to
our society today, including how racism influences policies related to
immigration and refugees as well as how governments and people respond to the
rise of authoritarian states that manipulate history and facts to consolidate
power.
Ken Burns: History cannot
be looked at in isolation. While we rightly celebrate American ideals of
democracy and our history as a nation of immigrants, we must also grapple with
the fact that American institutions and policies, like segregation and the
brutal treatment of indigenous populations, were influential in Hitler’s
Germany. And it cannot be denied that, although we accepted more refugees than
any other sovereign nation, America could have done so much more to help the
millions of desperate people fleeing Nazi persecution.
THE U.S. AND THE HOLOCAUST
features a fascinating array of historical figures that includes Franklin D.
Roosevelt, Charles Lindbergh, Dorothy Thompson, Rabbi Stephen Wise, and Henry
Ford, as well as Anne Frank and her family, who applied for but failed to
obtain visas to the U.S. before they went into hiding. This unexpected aspect
of the Franks’ story underscores an American connection to the Holocaust that
will be new to many viewers.
The film also looks at American
policy on topics ranging from Calvin Coolidge’s staunch anti-immigration
ideology to FDR’s Lend-Lease bill and how these fights took shape on the home
front, including the emergence of Nazi sympathizers. Some of America’s most
well-known leaders, such as Lindbergh and Ford, were also among the most vocal
antisemites. Similarly, new light is shed on many of the well-known
controversies surrounding the American response to the Holocaust, including the
dreadful story of the more than 900 Jewish refugees aboard the MS St. Louis,
who were denied entry to Cuba and the U.S. in 1939 and forced to return to an
uncertain fate in Europe, and the enduring debate over whether the Allies
should have bombed Auschwitz.
Lynn Novick: Exploring this
history and putting the pieces together of what we knew and what we did has
been a revelation. During the Second World War, millions of Americans fought
and sacrificed to defeat fascism, but even after we began to understand the
scope and scale of what was happening to the Jewish people of Europe, our
response was inadequate and deeply flawed. This is a story with enormous
relevance today as we are still dealing with questions about immigration,
refugees and who should be welcomed into the United States.
Americans had heard about Nazi
persecution on their radios and read about it in the press. Many responded by
denouncing the Nazis, marching in protest and boycotting German goods.
Individual Americans performed heroic acts to save individual Jews and stood up
to Nazism at home and abroad. Some 200,000 Jews eventually found refuge in the
United States, but many more were denied entry. As the Nazi terror escalated,
the U.S. responded by tightening, not opening, its borders to refugees. “If I
had my way,” said Senator Robert Reynolds of North Carolina at the time, “I
would today build a wall about the United States so high and so secure that not
a single alien or foreign refugee from any country upon the face of this earth
could possibly scale or ascend it.”
Ultimately, THE U.S. AND THE
HOLOCAUST offers little consolation to those who believe that the challenges
posed by nativism, antisemitism, xenophobia and racism are buried deeply and
permanently in the past. “The institutions of our civilization [are] under
tremendous stress,” warns writer Daniel Mendelsohn, who shares his family’s
story in the film. “The fragility of civilized behavior is the one thing you
really learn, because these people, who we now see in these sepia photographs,
they're no different from us. You look at your neighbors, the people at the dry
cleaner, the waiters in the restaurant. That's who these people were. Don't kid
yourself.”
Sarah Botstein: At the
center of our narrative is the moving and inspiring first-hand testimony of
witnesses who were children in the 1930s. They share wrenching memories of the
persecution, violence and flight that they and their families experienced as
they escaped Nazi Europe and somehow made it to America. Their survival attests
to the truth of the remark made by journalist Dorothy Thompson that ‘for
thousands and thousands of people a piece of paper with a stamp on it is the
difference between life and death.’
THE U.S. AND THE HOLOCAUST is
narrated by Peter Coyote; Voice Actors Include Liam Neeson, Matthew Rhys, Paul
Giamatti, Meryl Streep, Werner Herzog, Joe Morton, Hope Davis, Bradley Whitford
and Helena Zengel.
The premiere of THE U.S. AND THE
HOLOCAUST will be accompanied by educational materials for middle and high
school classrooms, highlighting recent research and perspectives. The
materials, which were prepared by PBS Learning Media in collaboration with leading
Holocaust education experts, are available at the Ken Burns in the Classroom
site. These materials include clips from the film as well as other resources
that connect to its core themes, such as immigration policy, racism,
isolationism, discrimination and more. International release will be explored
along with translation into Spanish and other languages. UNUM, Ken Burns’s
website that looks at the connections between the past and current events, will
also utilize other films from the Florentine Films library to facilitate
conversations about the Holocaust and other moments in history.
THE U.S. AND THE HOLOCAUST
features interviews with some of the country’s leading scholars on the period,
including Daniel Greene, Rebecca Erbelding, Peter Hayes, Deborah Lipstadt,
Daniel Mendelsohn, Daniel Okrent, Nell Irvin Painter, Mae Ngai and Timothy
Snyder. On-camera witnesses include Susan Hilsenrath Warsinger, Eva Geiringer
[Schloss], Joseph Hilsenrath, Marlene Mendelsohn, Sol Messinger and Guy Stern,
who recently turned 100 years old.
THE U.S. AND THE HOLOCAUST will
be available to stream for free on all station-branded PBS platforms, including
PBS.org and the PBS Video app, available on iOS, Android, Roku, Apple TV,
Android TV, Amazon Fire TV, Samsung Smart TV, Chromecast and VIZIO. PBS station
members can view the documentary via PBS Passport as part of a full collection
of Ken Burns films. For more information about PBS Passport, visit the PBS
Passport FAQ.
^ This 3 Part Mini-Series starts
tonight (and airs tonight, tomorrow and on Tuesday.) It looks at the United
States (the Eugenic Movement throughout the US, the Jim Crow Race Laws in the
US South), the Rise of Hitler and Nazism in German, Global Anti-Semitism and
what the US Government and the Ordinary American knew and did (and didn't do)
while the Holocaust was happening. ^
https://www.pbs.org/kenburns/us-and-the-holocaust/about-the-film
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