Become a Member
Opinion

My Shoah film about survivor Leon Greenman

A teenage film maker keeps his promise to tell a survivor's story

January 18, 2018 15:04
IMG_7332
2 min read

I was seven years old when I met a Holocaust survivor for the first time.

His name was Leon Greenman, and every Sunday he would sit in the Jewish Museum to answer questions. My parents thought it was important for me to visit him while the opportunity still existed. I can’t remember what I asked him — my mother worried I was too intrusive — but I left determined to see him again.

By the time Leon died two years later, I felt I had lost a family member. Over our regular Sunday meetings, he didn’t just teach me about the Holocaust; in my eyes he became the Holocaust. Like many others, I promised I would tell his story after he had gone.

I am now aged 19, and have just finished making a documentary about Leon’s life after the camps. I chose not to focus on his harrowing experiences during the Holocaust, but on a story equally deserving of telling: the keeping of a promise to God that if he survived Auschwitz, he would tell the world what he had witnessed. When Leon was freed in 1945 only to discover that his wife and three-year old son had been murdered, he made this vow his life’s purpose.