Episode 51: Kristine Keese - Holocaust survivor
Posted: March 10th, 2012, 8:18 am
Thank you Paul for another inspiring show with a very special guest. I've gained so much strength and wisdom from listening to interviews and reading memoirs by people who survived WW2. It became a form of therapy to me. If they could survive and thrive in spite of the external insanity and darkness of their world at that time, then I can certainly survive and thrive through my internal battles with darkness, fear and that cruel belittling voice of self-hatred in my own head that threatens to take over if I give in to it.
So many people who survived that war could not bring themselves to talk about it. I hope Kristine Keese knows how valuable her story is and how much people like me appreciate her courage to share it so openly.
Here's a video about another Holocaust survivor who is now 108! Alice moves me to tears (hopeful, inspired tears!) every time I watch. I can never get enough of her and I think of this as my "Alice Therapy".
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KMfxU3fC ... re=related
My favorite, most inspiring WW2 memoirs:
#1 In My Hands: Memories of a Holocaust Rescuer - Irene Opdyke - One of the most profound books I have ever experienced. A Catholic teenager living in Poland when the war broke out, she chose repeatedly to risk her neck to help Jews hide and escape. I couldn't put the book down. Profound courage.
#2 Unbroken by Laura Hillenbrand. I fell in love with Louis Zamperini, teenage ruffian turned Olympic runner turned WW2 bombardier turned Japanese prisoner of war. If his story had been written as fiction I would've thrown it over my shoulder in disgust thinking no one would ever survive all that in real life.
#3 All But My Life by Gerda Klein. Survivor of several death camps and a death march across Germany. She lost her whole family and watched her 3 best friends slowly die. Then an incredible love story at the end of the war beats any Hollywood ending. Another unbelievable but true story of survival and the power of perseverance and optimism in the face of hopelessness and devastation.
So many people who survived that war could not bring themselves to talk about it. I hope Kristine Keese knows how valuable her story is and how much people like me appreciate her courage to share it so openly.
Here's a video about another Holocaust survivor who is now 108! Alice moves me to tears (hopeful, inspired tears!) every time I watch. I can never get enough of her and I think of this as my "Alice Therapy".
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KMfxU3fC ... re=related
My favorite, most inspiring WW2 memoirs:
#1 In My Hands: Memories of a Holocaust Rescuer - Irene Opdyke - One of the most profound books I have ever experienced. A Catholic teenager living in Poland when the war broke out, she chose repeatedly to risk her neck to help Jews hide and escape. I couldn't put the book down. Profound courage.
#2 Unbroken by Laura Hillenbrand. I fell in love with Louis Zamperini, teenage ruffian turned Olympic runner turned WW2 bombardier turned Japanese prisoner of war. If his story had been written as fiction I would've thrown it over my shoulder in disgust thinking no one would ever survive all that in real life.
#3 All But My Life by Gerda Klein. Survivor of several death camps and a death march across Germany. She lost her whole family and watched her 3 best friends slowly die. Then an incredible love story at the end of the war beats any Hollywood ending. Another unbelievable but true story of survival and the power of perseverance and optimism in the face of hopelessness and devastation.