Bernard Korbman and Mara Moustafine.
Holocaust museum director Bernard Korbman discusses the complexity of Jewish identities.
unknown
01 April 2009
source not available
mov (Quicktime);
4.6 MB
01min45sec
Korbman:
00:05
I didn’t have a sense of my Jewish identity until I was in my early 30s. When I was born, I was not circumcised, because my mother had been in Auschwitz, so – and that was the first way that they told who a Jewish boy was, so I was not circumcised and in fact, I was not told I was Jewish. I didn’t know.
00:33
The first time I knew I was Jewish was when I arrived in Australia, because in France, with the official separate constitutional separation of church and school, never – there was never any religious instruction in the school. And the first – I arrived at school and on the first Friday of school, we had religious instructions in those days and a little Jewish man came up to me and said, “Come with me little one.” You know, “You’re Jewish.” I went with him and he was very nice and I went home and said to my mother, “This little fellow said I was Jewish, am I and what is it?” And my mother could say, “Yes you are.” But to, “what is it?” she didn’t know herself because she came from a very assimilated background, which she’d had nannies and governesses and her father had a batman because he was an army officer and so on, so she knew nothing about the religion.
01:23
I think her – she knew she was Jewish but yeah, very little about her religion. And then there was something about – because of my background, I was never that comfortable in the Jewish community and so I hung out mainly with non-Jewish kids.
01:45
End transcript
Visit the multicultural Library for other documents, video, audio and images.