25 min

Episode 123 - Karen Baum Gordon - On Surviving the Surviving The Make Meaning Podcast

    • Books

It took 10 years for Karen Baum Gordon to write and publish her memoir, The Last Letter: A father’s struggle, a daughter’s quest, and the long shadow of the Holocaust, under the guidance of a friend who was an editor at McGraw-Hill. The book explores generations of her family through letters, while grappling with the ancestral trauma and psychological legacy of terror, genocide and persecution.
In the latest episode of the Make Meaning Podcast, Karen speaks with host Lynne Golodner about the complexities of identity, what inspired her to write a memoir even though she never considered herself a writer, how she understands the legacy of family, and embracing intergenerational love, loss and life.
In this episode, Lynne and Karen discuss:
The constant act of becoming The legacy of her grandparents, who perished in the Holocaust The notion of “surviving the surviving” How keeping a journal helps with the writing of a memoir Intergenerational Trauma Antisemitism Being Jewish and American, in what order? Confronting family sadness & how children are impacted, or influenced, by their parents’ pain Combining the quotidian details of her grandparents’ lives, excerpts of their letters and her own ponderings Links and Resources:
Harvard College Columbia Business School Media Transformation Challenge Program Poynter Institute Baltimore Orioles The Chronicle of the Lodz Ghetto Lodz Ghetto Finding Your Voice at Midlife Rabbi Rick Jacobs Union for Reform Judaism Buchenwald Brooklyn Heights Synagogue Congregation Beth Ahm Your People LLC The Museum of Jewish Heritage Strategic Horizons, Inc. McKinsey & Co. Find Karen Baum Gordon
Website
Facebook
LinkedIn
Instagram

It took 10 years for Karen Baum Gordon to write and publish her memoir, The Last Letter: A father’s struggle, a daughter’s quest, and the long shadow of the Holocaust, under the guidance of a friend who was an editor at McGraw-Hill. The book explores generations of her family through letters, while grappling with the ancestral trauma and psychological legacy of terror, genocide and persecution.
In the latest episode of the Make Meaning Podcast, Karen speaks with host Lynne Golodner about the complexities of identity, what inspired her to write a memoir even though she never considered herself a writer, how she understands the legacy of family, and embracing intergenerational love, loss and life.
In this episode, Lynne and Karen discuss:
The constant act of becoming The legacy of her grandparents, who perished in the Holocaust The notion of “surviving the surviving” How keeping a journal helps with the writing of a memoir Intergenerational Trauma Antisemitism Being Jewish and American, in what order? Confronting family sadness & how children are impacted, or influenced, by their parents’ pain Combining the quotidian details of her grandparents’ lives, excerpts of their letters and her own ponderings Links and Resources:
Harvard College Columbia Business School Media Transformation Challenge Program Poynter Institute Baltimore Orioles The Chronicle of the Lodz Ghetto Lodz Ghetto Finding Your Voice at Midlife Rabbi Rick Jacobs Union for Reform Judaism Buchenwald Brooklyn Heights Synagogue Congregation Beth Ahm Your People LLC The Museum of Jewish Heritage Strategic Horizons, Inc. McKinsey & Co. Find Karen Baum Gordon
Website
Facebook
LinkedIn
Instagram

25 min