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Tracy-Ann Oberman

ByTracy-Ann Oberman, Tracy-Ann Oberman

Opinion

In 2024, we must find strength in this new, dystopian world

Dystopian fiction doesn’t come close to the horror of October 7

January 4, 2024 16:57
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3 min read

Do you remember the Dr Pepper TV ads in the early 2000s? The fizzy drink from America made its way over to the United Kingdom and for those of us who hadn’t got a clue what it was, the brand’s catchphrase, “What’s the worst that could happen?”, worked perfectly. The ads showed seemingly innocuous teenage situations turning into social nightmares after a sip of Dr Pepper.

I really like those adverts, mainly because “What’s the worst that could happen?” seems to have become my catchphrase.

After I was taken to Yad Vashem at a very young age — far too young to process what was I was seeing — my childhood innocence evaporated. I saw the worst that could happen. I’m not alone in this: most of my generation are Holocaust obsessed. Like Chicken Licken, we grew up looking over our shoulders at the sky, waiting for it to fall in. Child psychology wasn’t high on parenting checklists circa 1970.

We all had grandparents, great-grandparents, parents and great-cousins who were affected by the Holocaust and the pogroms that came before. We grew up with these stories. I remember sitting with friends of mine (we must have been about ten years old) having a heated conversation about which one of us would survive if the Nazis came to power again who had the bluest eyes and blondest hair, whose name was not so Jewish?