Sonia Reich believes that she is being hunted. Her food is rancid and hair ridden with lice; her doctors are trying to poison her, and someone has painted a yellow Star of David on her lawn to mark her for the executioners. After raising a family in Skokie, Illinois, more than six decades later, the 76 year old woman is again a 9 year old girl in the small Polish village of Dubno, struggling to survive the Holocaust.
On Monday, March 31st, Howard Reich will appear at the Pritzker Military Library for a screening of an excerpt from his in-progress documentary, Prisoner of Her Past, and an interview with Rick Kogan. This event is free and open to the public. The presentation and live webcast will begin at 6:00 p.m., preceded by a reception for Library members at 5:00 p.m. It will also be recorded for television broadcast on WYCC-TV/Channel 20.
Sonia Reich does not have Alzheimer’s, dementia, or other ailments commonly diagnosed in senior citizens. She has a little-known illness called late-onset Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. In every other respect an alert, self-sufficient adult, she can no longer distinguish her childhood memories from real life. Dubno was a flourishing village of more than 12,000 Jews before World War II, and less than 100 are estimated to have survived the Holocaust.
Her story first appeared in print with an article by her son in the Tribune, and then in his book, The First and Final Nightmare of Sonia Reich: A Son's Memoir. Howard Reich is currently working on Prisoner of Her Past with Chicago’s Kartemquin Films, producers of the award-winning Hoop Dreams. The film includes scenes from present-day Dubno, now located in the Ukraine, and documents its history through interviews with other survivors – and Sonia Reich herself, as a son tries to understand why his mother is reliving this horrific trauma for a second time.
Howard Reich has been a Chicago Tribune arts critic and writer since 1983. In addition to covering jazz, blues and gospel music, he has authored several investigative reports on cultural issues, including the systematic theft of royalties from the jazz composer Jelly Roll Morton and the illicit trade in looted musical instruments. His cultural investigations have been featured on ABC-TV's Nightline and National Public Radio. He is the author of two other books: Jelly's Blues: The Life, Music and Redemption of Jelly Roll Morton (2003), with William Gaines, and Van Cliburn (1993).
Rick Kogan is currently senior staff writer and columnist for the Chicago Tribune Sunday Magazine and host of the popular WGN-AM Sunday Papers radio program
Seating for this event is limited, so reservations are strongly recommended. Call 312.587.0234 or email events@pritzkermilitarylibrary.net.
Official Website: http://www.pritzkermilitarylibrary.org/events
Added by pritzkermilitarylibrary on January 23, 2008