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Holocaust memory is about our search into memory--an attempt to make contact, in our own souls, with the reality and immensity of what was lost.
Walter Reich of George Washington University delivers the November Bradley Lecture.
More information to come.
At this event, panelists discussed the role of religion in modern society.
Public awareness of the Holocaust has grown strikingly in recent years, resulting in a widespread appreciation of the enormity of that single historical event as well as its implications for our understanding of the most horrendous possibilities in human behavior. But this beneficial growth in Holocaust awareness has been paralleled...
While Reich has been ridiculed by the press for his Walter Mitty tendencies, the brilliantly focused mental CAT scan which Reich's behavior illuminates has yet gone unexamined.
“New Blueprints for the Left,” sighs a contented Newsweek headline over a story about Robert Kuttner’s The End of Laissez-Faire: National Purpose and the Global Economy After the Cold War1 and Robert B. Reich’s The Work of Nations: Preparing Ourselves for 21st-Century Capitalism.
It is not shared history withpatients, but rather variety and quality of experience that determine how successful psychotherapistscan be.
We should protest the abuse, distortion, and exploitation of Holocaust memory.




