“What gives me life is talking about death.”Tziporah Feivlovitz is driven to tell the world
The Feivlovitz family, who owned a kiosk on Rechov Chanita, would string a long rope reaching from the kiosk until the bank located 100 yards down the road. They’d then hang thousands of Holocaust photos from the rope. Children who came to see the exhibit would sit down on the sidewalk and Pinchas Feivlovitz would tell them his story
Pinchas and Tziporah Feivlovitz, both Holocaust survivors and eventually residents of Neve Sha’anan, made it their lives’ goal to memorialize the Holocaust. Their modest, excruciatingly painful exhibit was a small part of their collective work, which included four books and led to Tziporah flying twice a year to lecture in Germany.
Pinchas’s delivery to the children always ended with the same poignant directive: “Remember, don’t forget.”
Because that was the Feivlovitzs’ message to their children, their neighbors, and all future generations. Remember. Don’t forget.
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