(Jewish Group) Ken Burns' PBS documentary asks hard questions about how Americans treated Jews
Ken Burns PBS documentary The U.S. And The Holocaust asks hard questions about how Americans treated Jews and immigrants during wartime
One of the first people introduced in Ken Burns new documentary series about the Holocaust is Otto, a Jewish man seen in the series first episode who tries to secure passage to America for his family but gets stymied by the countrys fierce anti-immigration legislation.
It isnt until the third episode that viewers learn that Ottos daughter is nicknamed Anne, and the pieces fall into place: Hes the father of Anne Frank, the Holocausts most famous victim.
Burns calls the delayed detail a hidden ball trick, hoping that an audience with only passing knowledge of the Frank family will not immediately clue into the fact that Otto was Annes father. Burns and his co-directors, two Jewish filmmakers, want their viewers to ponder the question of what the U.S. government felt Annes life was worth when she was still a living, breathing Jewish child and not yet a world-famous author and martyr of the human condition.
It was important to us to look at a way in which you can rearrange the familiar tropes so that you see: This is a family that is getting the hell out of Germany, and hoping eventually to put more distance between them by going to the United States, which basically in the majority of the citizens and in the policy of its government does not want them, Burns told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency.
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