Voices of Resilience

Voices of Resilience

An Anthology of Stories Written by Children of Holocaust Survivors

Born in the shadow of the Holocaust, twelve writers illuminate how resilience, creativity, love, and hope emerge from  a legacy of trauma.

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About the Book

This anthology brings together the voices of twelve writers born to Holocaust survivors, each exploring the enduring impact of war, genocide, and displacement on their lives. Through a series of closely connected personal narratives, the contributors examine themes of resilience, identity, memory, and healing, shaped by the legacies their parents carried into the postwar world.

The stories span continents and generations. Set in Asia, Europe, the Middle East, and North America, they reflect a wide range of historical and personal circumstances. Some contributors grew up with a clear awareness of their Jewish identity and family history, while others discovered their Jewish roots only later in life. Childhoods unfolded under vastly different conditions, from communist regimes marked by upheaval and revolution to the relative safety of postwar North America. Yet across these varied settings, shared patterns emerge.

Each writer contributes multiple pieces, allowing a deeper view into individual lives shaped by inherited trauma and moral responsibility. The narratives reveal how the experiences of the Holocaust were transmitted across generations, influencing relationships, identity formation, emotional sensitivity, and personal resilience. Alongside accounts of fear, loss, and rupture are stories of love, compassion, continuity, and renewal.

The anthology also situates these personal testimonies within a broader historical and psychological framework. An essay by historian Dr. Chris Friedrichs provides essential historical context, while psychiatrist and child survivor Dr. Robert Krell contributes a foreword that addresses the psychological dimensions of intergenerational trauma and post-traumatic growth. Together, these perspectives illuminate how the Holocaust continued to shape Jewish families long after the war, across diverse societies and political systems.

At a time of renewed global instability and increased attention to Holocaust education, this collection offers a meaningful contribution to discussions of memory, displacement, and the long-term human consequences of genocide. It stands as both a work of remembrance and a thoughtful exploration of how history lives on in the generations that follow.

TO BE RELEASED: 5 May 2026

Details
Author: Deborah (Devora) Ross-Grayman
Series: Holocaust Survivor True Stories
Genre: Holocaust
Tags: Audio rights available, Foreign Rights Available, Soon to be released
ASIN: B0GMW8DF3M
ISBN: 9789493418608
List Price: $17,95
eBook Price: $6,99
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Deborah (Devora) Ross-Grayman

Deborah grew up in Berkeley, California. Throughout her life, she has demonstrated a natural proclivity for facilitating and working with individuals and groups in diverse settings. After university, she worked as a real estate agent, obtained her broker's license, and co-founded a real estate company with eight other women. Deborah served as president and managing broker, while obtaining her master's degree in clinical psychology, and becoming vitally engaged as a family, child, and play therapist. She emigrated to Vancouver, Canada in 1993.Fifteen years ago, Deborah perceived a need for activities designed to provide emotional and creative support for children of Holocaust survivors like herself. She continues to co-facilitate Vancouver's Second-Generation Group and assisted in touring the Gesher exhibit of artwork produced by the combined creative efforts of Holocaust survivors, child survivors, and the second-generation. Motivated to honour those who saved lives through acts of civil courage, Deborah co-founded the Wallenberg-Sugihara Civil Courage Society (WSCCS) in Vancouver.Deborah is a mixed-media artist, with works appearing in private and public collections. Currently, she has turned her creative focus towards writing - facilitating a Second-Generation writing group, and working on a memoir. Organizing this anthology has been profoundly meaningful for her.Stepchildren and their families are a blessing in Deborah's life. She and her husband, Henry Ross-Grayman, are active participants in Jewish meditation and members of Or Shalom. Along with their two dogs, they split their time between Vancouver and Salt Spring Island.

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