What does it mean to be a stranger – in a society, in one’s own history, and in oneself? Michel Friedman addresses this question in his haunting text “Strange”. In it, Friedman, a lawyer, publicist, and philosopher, comes to terms with his Jewish family history and the experiences of Holocaust survivors. The 54 chapters of the monologue represent 50 lost and four rescued family members, including mother, father, child, and grandmother. Rescued by Oskar Schindler, the family emigrates – after a failed return to Krakow, Poland – first to Paris and finally to Germany.
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