Date: Jul. 16th, 2008 01:11 am (UTC)
ext_2047: (0)
You're very welcome.

The easy part of the reply to your comment is that everyone on the trip was given a blue March of the Living jacket and backpack in Poland and a water bottle holder and t-shirt in Israel. Those are the jackets you can see in the Warsaw and Treblinka photos, when it was chilly and a little drizzly.

if the feelings you got were anything like the feelings I got at the former, then I can only imagine how harrowing the trip must have been.

Oddly, I felt very ... flat, for the most part, when we were at the camps. Intellectually I knew that what went on there was horrifying, but I didn't feel it so much. I wonder(ed) what, if anything, would incite a reaction like many of the other participants were showing, and I thought maybe it had to do with stories. I engage with the world most personally through stories, which is maybe why reading Elie Wiesel and Primo Levi etc. hit me harder than standing on the grounds, and why thinking of what they said made those grounds come alive.

As I mentioned to ahab99 in the other post, people were saying that the Washington museum was more affecting than Yad Vashem in Jerusalem -- I haven't been to the DC museum and would like to see not only how the two museums compare but how it compares to the camps.

Sorry if this makes no sense; I'm going a little cross-eyed here with sleepiness.
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