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Czech Republic: The Women from Room 28 Dateline: September 2003 Czech Republic Synopsis: Room 28 is the story of a unique group of teenage girls, survivors from one particular dormitory in the Nazi ghetto of Theresienstadt, near Prague. Now lively, articulate, optimistic grandmothers in their mid seventies, most of them fluent English speakers, they are eager to tell the stories they have kept bottled up for sixty years. |
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| "Room 28 was a tiny protecting island that helped us come to terms with the loss of our homes and the separation from our parents". Fear was never far from the girls' minds and eventually most of them were sent to Auschwitz. However, the self confidence the girls had developed in Room 28 stood them in good stead. Their survival rate in Auschwitz was well above the average. Several calmly lied about their ages, saying they were sixteen when they were one, two or even three years younger. That saved them from the gas chambers. At the end of the war only one of the girls turned up for the rendezvous in Prague. Traumatized by their experiences, all the survivors had scattered to the four corners of the earth ...
It was not until nearly 50 years after the war that they met up again, and in so doing they made an amazing discovery: "It was as if nothing had happened over the intervening years: We still had the same way of thinking. We recognised we were a family - which was nice as so many of us had lost our families." Now they meet every Autumn. The good which used to co-exist with evil in Theresienstadt has now outlived it...and triumphs through their testimony. Author Hannelore Brenner Wonschick, who revealed the story in"The Girls of Room 28" (an English translation of the German original will appear in 2007) has teamed up with Documentary Director Bill Treharne Jones. In 2003 they hired Cloudburst Media Director Philip Carr to go to Prague and record some of the harrowing and inspiring stories of this remarkable group of women. |
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| Director: Philip Carr Nationality: British Philip was educated at Eton and Durham University. He then attended
the British Army's officer training academy at Sandhurst, and spent three
years serving as a cavalry officer in the UK, Canada, Oman, and Argentina.
Upon leaving the Army in 2000 with the rank of Captain, Philip entered
the media world, training at CBS News, CNN and APTN in London, and at
the Edit Centre in New York. He formed Cloudburst Media in 2002 and since
then has filmed around the world including the following countries: Burundi,
Democratic Republic of Congo, the Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Egypt,
Kenya, Nigeria, Rwanda, South Africa, Sudan, Uganda, Pakistan, India,
China, Panama, Honduras and the USA. Philip has recently completed his
latest documentary "Buying Time For Peace" about the unique role of the
MDRP in demobilizing and reintegrating ex-combatants in the Great Lakes
Region of Central Africa. ![]() |
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