Life is Beautiful

Reviewed by: KateWrath

February 13, 1999

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And likewise, I think of Edelstein's vehement condemnation of "Life Is Beautiful." I agree, it's not historically accurate, it doesn't portray the dark evil of concentration camps, but isn't there something compelling about the idea of a father wanting to protect his child from evil? Okay, so a real father attempting the same thing would have been shot. But the first version at least has the benefit of being true to a loving parent's vision of reality, while the second version is true primarily to the Nazi vision of reality. I think both have their place, but apparently Edelstein wants only the second. Personally, I find that limiting (and I'm not related to or aquainted with any Holocaust observers, so already my experience is limited), and limiting one's experiences tends to make them less real. Humor is a human reaction, and not, I think, always a way to deny reality, but rather, sometimes a way to take reality into your life and make it your own. If the Nazis' actions have stripped us of the ability to react to their actions in all the ways available to us, I think they have succeeded in making us less human.

Of course, at the time, I was writing questions about the Holocaust for children and was constantly struggling with how I could possibly explain to 12-year-olds that things like this happen. So maybe I was just susceptible to the idea that surviving in order to remember is very adult concept of retribution, while perhaps it would be enough for a child to survive in order to be happy at some later point in time.

All of which is to say that the absence of room Edelstein's mind for either of these alternative views strikes me as troublingly ungenerous and uncompassionate.

Whew, okay, just needed to get that off my chest. I feel better now.

 

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