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Elliott Karstadt

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Elliott Karstadt,

Elliott Karstadt

Opinion

The Balkans and its history helps us confront our Jewish identity

We said 'never again' after the Shoah but, as a student group I led on a tour of the region has learned, it happened again — very recently

August 24, 2018 10:11
The Stone Flower monument to the victims of the Jasenovac camp in modern-day Croatia
2 min read

In his 2012 travelogue, Where the West Ends, Michael Totten talks of citizens of the former Yugoslavia wrestling with national identity in their new reality.

When asked, “who are you”, Predrad Delibasic says he made up an answer: “‘I am Jewish!’ I said. My mother said ‘no, no, no’. But I didn’t know or care. My friends were Jews, Muslim, and Catholics. After I was told I wasn’t Jewish, I said I was a Muslim. But that wasn’t right either…”

I have just returned from being the educator on Kayitz Perach, the ten-day annual tour of Europe organised by Liberal Judaism — possibly the only one of its kind for Jewish sixth-formers in the UK.

Having experienced a month-long Israel Tour following their GCSEs, the teens are now challenged to consider the development of the Jewish diaspora and their place within it. What does it mean to live as a minority? Where do we belong? From Sarajevo to Vienna — and many places in between — we asked these questions.

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