It’s not possible to remember alone
“ I found dozens of my counterparts, from my generation,
whose lives were shaped by the past—these are the other grandchildren,
those who, like me, remain drawn in by our grandparents’ stories, what
they survived, what they lived through, that enabled us to be who we
are, that enabled our very existence. We aren’t alone in our desire to
know more, to pass something on. I have looked for Valy through the
birth of two children now; it is hard not to wonder at the privilege of
that opportunity. And yet—they are all dying, our eyewitnesses. Our
connections. We, the grandchildren, have these stories we have all
collected. What will our own children know of these stories? What do we
want them to know? It is not the same as hearing it from the witnesses
themselves. But it will have to be something. It is important that we
have one another. It’s not possible to remember alone.”
―
Sarah Wildman,
Paper Love: Searching for the Girl My Grandfather Left Behind
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