Centropa has well more than 50 films online. Our historical documentaries delve into the history of specific countries while our personal stories take you through the entire 20th century—as told by those who lived on its front lines.
We know you’re probably pressed for time, so here’s a list to consider—the films we feel you’ll learn the most from, and which will stay with you long after you’ve seen them. But do dig deeper by going into our regular film page it really is a treasure chest of 20th century European Jewish memory.
gives an overview of Central Europe for social studies, geography or history classes
Maps, Central Europe and History
In seven minutes, Morley Safer will take you from the Treaty of Vienna in 1815 through the final collapse of Yugoslavia in 1999.
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provides a brief summary of the Holocaust
The Ones I Lost
A five minute film that begins with snapshots of Jews who were murdered during the Holocaust, followed by three short vignettes in which Centropa interviewees tell us about the ones they lost.
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offers a view of the Holocaust in ways that Hispanic-American students can relate to
El Otro Camino: 1492
This 11 minute film takes us from Columbus’s journey in 1492 to the siege of Sarajevo in 1992, when Sephardic Jews helped save their city. This film isn’t just for Spanish speakers; it gives students and teachers a very different geographical perspective on the Holocaust—and leaves you with a powerful message about working together.
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challenges our way of thinking of Jews and Muslims working together, and works well for social studies, civics, and current events
Survival in Sarajevo -- Friendship in a Time of War
Our second most popular film. When war came to Bosnia in 1992 and Sarajevo was besieged, Jews and Muslims, Serbs, and Croats, all turned a synagogue into a humanitarian aid agency. So many students, in so many countries, were so inspired by this film we created a student diplomacy competition.
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can be shown to elementary school students, or teaches about pre-war Jewish life
Max Uri -- Looking For Frieda, Finding Frieda
Max had fallen hard. But his girlfriend fled Vienna when the Nazis came. Then on Max’s first day in Tel Aviv...
Read more & watchKurt Brodmann -- The Story of the Brodmann Family
Leopold was acting in a play. He looked into the audience and saw Franzi. And that brought the curtain down for him.
Read more & watchKatarina Loefflerova "The Importance Of A Good Vacation"
In her 95-years, Katerina Loefflerova said the most important thing she learned was: don’t put off your vacations!
Read more & watchErnest Galpert -- Growing Up Religious
The Galperts lived in Munkacs, which had been in five countries in 60 years. Here is their story.
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tells the story of the Holocaust and is narrated in English. (this film also works very well with younger students)
Return to Rivne: A Holocaust Story
Shelly and Raya live in North Carolina, and in their late 70s, they returned to the Ukrainian village where they and their mothers were hidden during the Holocaust by a Christian family
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tells the story of the kindertransports to England
Lilli Tauber - A Suitcase full of Memories
This powerful film opens with a young girl reading her diary, remembering what it was like to be sent on a train from Vienna to London. But what happened to her parents who stayed behind? Four actors will share with you Lilly Tauber’s story.
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features Righteous Gentiles who saved the people we interviewed
Matilda Kalef -- Tri Obljube
Shown in six international film festivals, here is the story of a mother and her two daughters on the run in Serbia, and the priest who took them in.
Read more & watchRenée Molho - A Bookstore in Six Chapters
Another film festival favorite. Renee and Solon were sweethearts in the Greek city of Thessaloniki. Then the Germans came. How both of them stayed alive—through Christians friends and complete strangers—is remarkable.
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takes us from enjoying a normal childhood, being deported to concentration camps, surviving the horrors, and starting life over again
Leo Luster "The Past Is Another Country"
Leo Luster and his family were living in Vienna’s second district when Austria was subsumed into the Third Reich. Leo takes us with him on a journey through the Theresienstadt Ghetto, then Auschwitz, and to work camps. Afterwards, he found his mother still alive in Theresienstadt, and the two of them started life over again in Israel.
Read more & watchDagmar Lieblova "From Bohemia To Belsen ... And Back Again"
Dagmar Lieblova’s father was a well-respected doctor in their small town in the Czech Republic. They were deported to Theresienstadt; then Dagmar was sent to Auschwitz, a work camp near Hamburg, and was finally liberated from Bergen-Belsen. Afterwards, she became a historian and has been working tirelessly to preserve the memories of others who suffered as she did.
Read more & watchTeofila Silberring -- So That Memory Doesn't Die
Teolia (Tosia) Silberring never left her beloved Krakow—except for the six years she lived in Nazi hell. Mrs Silberring remembers her neighborhood by door numbers, her school at this address, her synagogue over there, even the church she used to go to on Sundays with her governess. In 1939, a life of wealth and privilege turned into a life of hell and torment. This is her story.
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features resistance and tell of the Jews who fought back
Miksa Domonkos: The Mayor Who Worked In Hell
Miksa Domonkos had been a hero in the First World War, saved countless lives in the Second World War during the siege of Budapest, and ended up being tortured by the Communists in the 1950s.
Read more & watchPeter Ginz And The Boys Of Vedem
A 17-minute documentary made for ABC News Nightline, this film shows a group of boys imprisoned in Theresienstadt and how they fought the Nazis—with pencil and paper.
Read more & watchRifka and Elvira - Coming of Age in a Time of War
Two teenage girls had to make a split-second decision when German troops started streaming in to their cities of Split and Dubrovnik—surrender or join the Partisans? These girls wanted to kick fascist butt. And they did.
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