The children's home on Auguststrasse
Movie | |
---|---|
German title | The children's home on Auguststrasse |
Original title | The House on August Street |
Country of production | Germany , Israel |
original language | Hebrew , German |
Publishing year | 2007 |
length | 62 minutes |
Rod | |
Director | Ayelet Bargur |
script | Noa Berman-Herzberg |
production | Edna Kowarsky Elinor Kowarsky Ayelet Bargur |
music | Jonatan Bar-Giora |
camera | Shay Levi Dudu Itzhaki |
cut | Einat Glazer-Zarhin |
occupation | |
Naomi Krauss |
The children's home on Auguststrasse is a documentary film about the fate of the children of the Jewish children's home in Beit Ahawah ( Hebrew בית אהבה, House of Love ) in Auguststrasse 14/16 in Berlin-Mitte . The history of the facility is closely linked to the life of the founder and longstanding director.
Beate Berger ( Hebrew ביאטה ברגר) caused the two Jewish painters Max Liebermann and Hermann Struck to sell some of their pictures in a campaign for the construction of a new Ahawah home in Palestine. Berger sewed the proceeds of 30,000 marks into her skirt and disguised as a nun went to Trieste, where she went to Haifa to build the refuge with the money. However, in order to bring the children of the Berlin home to Palestine, the British government of Palestine had to issue child certificates, one of the conditions being that the child had to be at least 15 years old. However, since younger children also lived in the home, certificates could only be issued for the older children. From 1934 to 1939, around 100 Jewish children were brought to Haifa in five groups and thus saved from deportation . The children who remained in Berlin were deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp , where none survived.
Beate Berger was able to bring a total of 300 children from Europe to Haifa, 100 of whom came from Germany, 75 from Austria, 15 from Italy and 100 from Poland, the Czech Republic and Hungary. She died on May 20, 1940 in Kirjat Bialik near Haifa , in the place where the children's home was newly built after fleeing Germany and where it still exists today as the Ahava Village for Children & Youth .
The documentary filmed by Ayelet Bargur is based on her book Ahawah is love and was made as a co-production by RBB, MDR and Israeli TV. It appeared on November 15, 2007 at 10:35 p.m. on Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg (rbb) and on December 12, 2007 at 00:05 a.m. on Mitteldeutscher Rundfunk (MDR). On May 15, 2008 the film received the Prix Circom regional . Various former Ahawa children from Berlin report on Beate Berger and her life in Palestine.
literature
- Ayelet Bargur: Ahawah means love: the story of the Jewish children's home in Berlin's Auguststrasse . dtv, 2006, ISBN 3-423-24521-2 .
- Regina Scheer : Ahawah. The forgotten house. Searching for clues in Berlin's Auguststrasse. Berlin and Weimar 1992.
Web links
- The children's home in the August street in the Internet Movie Database (English)
- The children's home on Auguststrasse - DAAD-Magazin.de from November 14, 2007
- Film award for “The Children's Home on Auguststrasse” - MDR press release of April 9, 2008
- The early realization of the educator Beate Berger - Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, November 15, 2007, No. 266, p. 46 (fee required)
- Photo album of the children of the "Beit Ahawah" home - Heinrich Stahl Collection Leo Baeck Institute New York Berlin / Federal Agency for Civic Education
Individual evidence
- ↑ fact or cinematic fiction?
- ^ Ahava Village History