Our Children (Yiddish: אונדזערע קינדער, Unzere kinder; Polish: Nasze dzieci) is a 1946 semi-documentary Yiddish-language film created in Polish People's Republic. It was directed by and based on the script by Rachel Auerbach and Binem Heller.[1] Its frame story is the interaction of Jewish orphans who survived the Holocaust with popular Polish comic duo Dzigan and Shumacher[2] [3] After the premiere the film was banned in Poland.[1] [4] In 1951 an English-language dubbing was released under the title It Will Never Happen Again,
It was one of the first films about the Holocaust and probably the first one to deal with the issue of "correct" representation of the post-Holocaust trauma.[5] Marc Caplan of Johns Hopkins University describes the film genre as "mixing satire, idyl, Holocaust testimony, and expressions of defiant hope". Described as "semi-documentary", much of the film is fictional,[1] including children's Holocaust reminiscences.[6]
One of the child survivors starring in the film is Shimon Redlich.[7]
In 1979 the original nitrate print was discovered and the film was restored by 1991, with English captions added.[8]
A group of Jewish orphans who survived the Holocaust, on a trip from their orphanage attend a show of Dzigan and Shumacher who staged a comic skit named "Singers of the Ghetto", as two beggars singing and dancing for food. Disagreeing with the portrayal of ghetto life, they heckle the show. Later they invite the comics to their orphanage so that they can tell then the true story. The comics accept the invitation and present there their best shows. At night they overhear children telling each other stories of their life. Next day they suggest children to present their own plays...[9] [4]
Dzigan and Schumacher presenting a skit from Sholem Aleichem's Kasrilevke brent (Kasrilevke is Burning) at the orphanage