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Reflections of Children of Holocaust Survivors
     in their Second Half of Life

Ronnie Dunetz, PhD
 (Presentation Offering)

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“The Second Generation will never know what the First Generation does in its bones, but what the Second Generation knows better than anyone else is the First Generation.”

(Bukiet, 2002)

  • What was it like growing up as a child to parents who went through one of the most horrific genocides in modern history- the Shoah?

  • How do these Second Generation individuals (“2G”), in their second half of life, view the impact and influence of the Holocaust on their life’s journey, on the people who they became?

  • What messages do these 2G carry with them from their parents and what legacies are they transmitting to the generations after?

  • What is the existential search for meaning exhibited by many 2G and what forms has it taken?

What happens in the second half of the life?

Today, 2Gs are nearly all in their 50s, 60s and 70s. They can apply the wisdom of their own life experience to understand the struggles, challenges and immense accomplishments of their survivor parents. The Second Generation is the “hinge generation” (term coined by Eva Hoffman), the ones who had the closest contact to those who survived the Holocaust, the ones who can speak of the intimate moments of silence as well as the deep sense of legacy that they feel inside them.

It is the second generation, today the grandparents of the younger generation, who are the “hinges”: opening and closing the memories, the struggles, the hope and the drive of their parents  to “choose life” by bringing it forth and securing its continuation. The Second Generation holds the torch as the responsibility to remember and never forget is being passed on to its descendants.

This presentation encompasses my doctoral research work in interviewing forty-one 2G from eleven different countries. It represents my experience and journey as a 2G qualitative researcher interacting with others like myself, all of whom are both diverse and similar in so many ways. In these most tragic and dangerous times for Israel and the Jewish people since the Shoah, I invite you to share this meaningful exploration, important conversation and sacred path of memory, reflection and dedication to our sacred legacy.

Watch an excerpt from the presentation of my doctoral thesis:

The Lecture: Content and Essence

This presentation encompasses my doctoral research work in interviewing forty-one 2G from eleven different countries. It represents my experience and journey as a 2G qualitative researcher interacting with others like myself, all of whom are both diverse and similar in so many ways.

In these most tragic and dangerous times for Israel and the Jewish people since the Shoah, I invite you to share this meaningful exploration, important conversation and sacred path of memory, reflection and dedication to our sacred legacy .

"​You [the Second Generation] have managed to re-channel your sadness, your anger, your inherited memories into such humanistic endeavors as medicine, law, social action, education, philanthropy. In other words, you are really the worthy children of your parents"

(Eli Wiesel)

Ocean

Ronnie Dunetz,  Recently, at age 64, Ronnie received his Doctorate of Philosophy in Wisdom Studies with the dissertation on Reflections of children of Holocaust survivors in their second half of life on their life experience.


For Ronnie, it was the culmination of years of interest and exploration in his life, informed by the story of his father, Mordechai Dunetz, who survived the massacres, labor camp and Partisans in Belarus during the Shoah.

Ronnie was born and raised in the US, lived for 5 formative years in East Asia in his twenties where he trained in Asian martial arts and philosophies, and has made Israel his home for over the last 3 decades.

He has been a senior-level life and career coach, group and workshop facilitator for more than 20 years, a trained storyteller of life stories, with a specialization in the area of "harvesting one’s wisdom in the second half of life".

More recently, Ronnie has trained and focused on "logotherapy", (meaning-based therapy), developed by Dr. Viktor Frankl, the renowned psychiatrist, philosopher, Holocaust survivor and author of the well-known book, Man’s Search for Meaning. He tries to keep with him what his late father taught him at all times: "Life is precious, we must do the best with it".

Visit the website: https://www.wisdom-opportunity.com

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In the Words of Attendees:

"Since hearing your presentation I have given so much thought to your presentation and have shared it with many people.  I never cease to be amazed by details of the commonality we 2Gs share. You articulated so clearly our experiences and thoughts"

Sandy Druck, Canada

"You presentation was perfect, so comprehensive, so real. My home was a very difficult place, there was no talking about anything. Today things look so different. Thank-you for the very important work you have done"

F.B., France-Israel

"Thank you, Ronnie, for a profound lecture about so many points that have resonated with me throughout the many stages of my life. There is no doubt that looking back is very important in improving my life in the present and future"

Michal Shaltiel, Israel

"The talk affected me very deeply [as a 2g]. It is hard to speak now"

Ed Stein, US

"I was impressed by your thorough informative presentation. I related to and understood so many of the 2G experiences and responses. Thank you for your hard work to research and share the voices of Second Generation"

Peppy Margolis, US

"Kol hakavod! Thank you for this very informative lecture"

Eva Vasdaz, Hungary-Israel

"Ronnie, my congratulations! Your presentation was very powerful indeed!"

Tamara Vershitskaya, Belarus

"Thanks very much Ronnie , I found our session very important and rewarding"

J.K., Australia

"You have helped me better understand post trauma stress of survivors.  I have met 2G people in my working life and I can now better relate to their personal issues. I wish I had had this insight at that time"

N.B., UK

"Ronnie Thank-you! I was very moved by your presentation and I want to thank you for your research and for sharing it so generously"

Miriam Suss OAM, Australia

"Thank you for the great presentation today and the great work you all are doing there"

A.N.M., Rwanda

"Very powerful and impressive. Amazing work. Thank you for sharing"

Elise Ciner, US

"Very moving presentation! Very well presented and very professional. Great and important work. Your father and thousands of others would be very moved and proud to know their lives are being honored and remembered"

Jeremy-Krauss, US- Germany

"Thank you again,  Dear Ronnie. Till my 40’s, I thought I was not normal and I am so relived to see that not only me is suffering of those characteristics"

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I'm inviting you to a lecture about a fascinating story of an entire generation that carries the legacy of the past with the hope for the future.
A lecture that teaches about coping, searching for meaning and taking responsibility to tell the story of the parents who survived the Holocaust.
A story that must be remembered and must not be forgotten.

Feel free to contact me or leave details and I will get back to you to coordinate a lecture.

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