Lectures
We would like to offer you a lecture: "Rebecca and Joseph Bau -The Miracle", an exhibit and a unique book, "Dear God! Have you ever gone hungry?" that deals with the Holocaust and is highly recommended by the Ministry of Education.
We are the daughters of Rebecca and Joseph Bau whose wedding is shown in the movie “Schindler’s List”. Our father was a painter, graphic artist, writer, poet, and animation pioneer who created animated movies using equipment he built with his own two hands. His uniqueness is in his original viewpoint that combines humor, laughter and optimism on subjects that are usually accompanied by anxiety, trauma and bitterness.
We convey to the listeners the wondrous life story of Joseph and Rebecca Bau in a fascinating way that combines humor. This story includes the many miracles that happened to them before, during and after the Holocaust.
The exhibit, lecture and book have received much praise from schools in Israel, U.S.A and Canada. They take interest in our different perspective that was taught to us and helped us cope with the subject of the Holocaust.
Since our father was used as a graphic artist in the Ghetto and camps it enabled him to forge documents and identity papers that allowed more than 400 Jews to escape the ghetto and the camp.
Our mother saved also hundreds of people by risking herself. She is also the one who put our father's name on Shindler's List. She herself was sent to Auschwitz.
The lecture emphasizes how it is possible to keep your dignity and freedom of thought under disgraceful circumstances meant to trample any semblance of human warmth.
The Bau couple's strength was in their ability to cope with impossible hardships with humor, unending optimism, the love of their fellow man and always finding the good in even the worst situations.
These traits that included humor, wisdom and life's experience allowed the Bau's to survive the inferno of WW2 while saving their souls and through rare bravery to save hundreds of other Jews.
This lecture that teaches about loyalty, courage and the love of fellow humans is important in that it instills the awareness of the Holocaust to all ages and shows the importance of maintaining human dignity through the humiliating conditions of the extermination camps. We also hope to end hate by understanding what our parents went through. We think that we should always talk about history, so it doesn't repeat itself.
All these important messages are conveyed through the use of Joseph Bau's unique drawings done in the ghetto and concentration camps and poems written in those impossible circumstances.
We have just come back from Boston and Rhode Island where we gave lectures at many schools, mostly public ones. We got many thank you letters from students who wrote to us how much they enjoyed our special stories.
This lecture can be given at Joseph Bau's studio or any other location, upon request.
Currently there is an exhibit of Joseph Bau's paintings at the Knesset (Israeli Parliament) and at the Tel Aviv Cinemateque. In these paintings Bau shows the logic and humor of the Hebrew language. We also give a lecture about the Hebrew language based upon Joseph Bau's book "Brit Mila".