Dialogue
Groups
Dialogue
Groups, comprised of Holocaust survivors/victims and their descendants;
perpetrators, bystanders, resisters and their descendants constitute the
foundation on which all other One by One programs are built. These groups
are led by professionally trained facilitators from both sides of the
war experience and are usually held in Germany.
Many
people who have been close to war and genocide carry the pain of unresolved
trauma, and often pass their fears, stereotypes and prejudices to the
next generation. The dialogue process is designed to begin to alleviate
the burdens of one's traumatic past and interrupt the intergenerational
transmission of trauma, prejudice and group hatred. The presence of participants
from both sides is essential to the group's success.
Dialogue Group participants
(usually 14-16 individuals) spend five days together in a conference center
sharing their family histories. Each person addresses the question, "How
has the Holocaust or the Nazi Regime affected my life?" The facilitators
create and maintain an atmosphere of respect, honesty and compassion.
In these heterogeneous groups,
one to one interaction creates an opportunity for participants to challenge
long-held stereotypes about "the other." The dialogue group
experience supports individuals as they re-examine their family's experiences
and its impact upon their lives. It creates an opportunity to have these
experiences heard and validated by those whom they had previously feared
or distrusted. Members of the victim side often hear the profound apologies
they have waited a lifetime to hear, and members of the perpetrator side
often meet descendants of victims for the first time and hear from them
that they are not to blame for atrocities committed by their parents,
grandparents and countrymen. Instead of carrying pain and guilt participants
often report that they felt a great burden had been taken off of their
shoulders. Many participants find they have renewed energy, which they
often devote to artistic creation, social action and teaching.
The One by One dialogue group
experience provides an opportunity to meet and learn from descendants
from the "other side" and provides a context for using this
burdensome legacy in a constructive manner. Nearly all the members report
that the dialogue experience helped them to transform some aspect of their
Holocaust legacy.
For
more information about One by One Dialogue Groups, please contact
us.
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