WE REMEMBER


ABOUT

An unprecedented time in world history, this film is the chilling and unforgettable story, not from the perspective of historians, but of six brave eye-witnesses from the horror of Auschwitz, an ordinary soldier who liberated Dachau, a young woman who helped the thousands of wounded soldiers and those living under the jack boot of Nazi totalitarianism.

Two Springhill Avenue Temple Youth Group Students Victoria Hirsch and Cory Garfunkel interview these individuals to hear their personal experiences during the tragic time of Hitler's reign.

ACCOLADES

"This documentary film is a profoundly important gift of the two young people of Mobile's Spring Hill Avenue Temple and even more of the six witnesses of the Holocaust who tell their stories on camera. Unique in this film are the stories of people who, in that awful time and place, lived the horror of a prisoner in Auschwitz, the shame of a Nazi uniform, the compassion of those who dared to help as they could, and the honor of a liberator. I especially wish that youth groups in Christian and Jewish congregations might watch this remarkable presentation together and find new ways of resolving that "never again."
~The Rev. Albert Kennington, Episcopal priest

"We are extremely impressed with your craftsmanship, your eye, and your editing. Terrific! The best work I have ever seen you do."
~ James Mapes, James Mapes Organization

"You did an excellent job with We Remember. It's a poignant film - informative and inspirational."
~ Susan Granger, Entertainment Critic


INTERVIEWS

AGNES TENNENBAUM
A first-hand witness of the Holocaust, Agnes was born in to an upper-middle class Hungarian Jewish family in 1922 and her life was torn apart by the Nazi occupation of Hungary. She experienced the horror of being jammed into a train cattle car for the three-day trip to the notorious Auschwitz death camp and forced into slave labor in the Allendorf underground munitions factory. The war was nearly over when she was taken on a death march from which she managed to escape. When she returned, she wrote her personal account in dedication to a women she met at Auschwitz, A Girl Named Rose.

HILMAR VON CAMPE
Hilmar is a native of Germany that argued passionately against the dangers of National Socialism. Hilmar authored four books; in Defeating the Totalitarian Lie: A Former Hitler Youth Warns America, Hilmar described his upbringing in Germany, the rise of Adolph Hitler and his indoctrination into the army. Hilmar was taken prisoner of war by the Soviets and managed to escape and later immigrated to America, where he made his home in Fairhope, Alabama. "Everything I write is based on my personal experience in Nazi Germany," he wrote. "I don't want to see a repetition." Hilmar passed away June 12th, 2012.

VIOLET PAPOUCHADO HIRSCH
Violet was born 1922 and raised in Atlanta, Georgia, the youngest of three daughters. She married Raymond Hirsch and they moved to Mobile, Alabama where they founded Bay Paper Company. Today, the company is run by their youngest son Alan. Their older son Rick is a critically acclaimed musician and song writer. In our film, Violet tells of experience as an American citizen during the Great Depression and World War II.

JAMES PHILPOT
James was born in 1924 and raised in rural Martin, Tennessee. The son of a World War I veteran, James grew up in the depths of the depression and experienced true poverty firsthand. James served honorably in the European theater fighting to liberate one of the most notorious concentration camps Dachau. James earned two Bronze Stars in service to his country. After the war, James returned home and graduated from Vanderbilt University with a degree in mechanical engineering. James served as a Scoutmaster in the Boy Scouts of America for many years, and since retiring, has enjoyed spending time with his wife, children, and grandchildren.

SIBYLLE VON CAMPE HEIDRICH
Sibylle grew up in Germany under the abysmal economic conditions after World War I. She witnessed the horror of her country being taken over and wrecked by Nazi thugs and lived through the destruction of her family, the death of her father and oldest brother. She was sent to live out the war on a farm, far from the bombed-out cities, where she fed dozens, sometimes hundreds, of refugees every day and experienced the joy of welcoming the American Army with open arms. Soon after, she reunited with her mother and later with her brother Hilmar.

ROLAND GUP FRY
A native of Mobile, Alabama, Roland graduated from Auburn University with a degree in Chemical Engineering. He worked for Seagram's in the defense & plastics division in Louisville, Kentucky, until he was drafted in World War II. He served our country in the Pacific Theater of the war. After the war, he came back to Mobile and worked for his Uncle Dean Gup at Brian Gup Army Insurance Agency. He was called back to serve in the Korean War. Afterwards, he returned to Mobile, married his wife Jean and continued working in the insurance industry. Roland and Jean have two daughters, a son and five grandchildren.



NEWS

"WE REMEMBER" SHOWING AT CRESCENT THEATER NOVEMBER 10TH
October 20th, 2013

click to view larger image
"We Remember" will be shown at the Crescent Theater in Mobile, Alabama, at 4:30pm. Tickets are available for $6; there is a $1.20 service fee for purchasing on-line or you can buy tickets at the door.
Visit crescenttheater.com to purchase tickets.

THANK YOU TO INDIEGOGO CONTRIBUTORS
August 13th, 2013
We just wanted to thank everyone for their contributions to our Indiegogo crowdfunding campaign! While we didn't reach our goal, we still managed to send out a few DVDs across the country. Thank you all so much for your support! Even though the campaign ended, you can still contribute; please consider purchasing a copy of We Remember on DVD

"WE REMEMBER" SHOWING AT SOLOMON VICTORY THEATER
July 14th, 2013

click to view larger image
Today, "We Remember" was shown at the National WWII Museum's Solomon Victory Theater at 6:00pm. Present at the showing were interviewers Victoria Hirsch and Cory Garfunkel who gave opening statements before the film and a questions and answers session after. Present in the audience was interviewee James Philpot and producers Gary Scovil, Kimberly Zimmerman, and Stanley Zimmerman. It was a great honor. A big thank you to everyone that attended, we hope you all enjoyed it!
Click here to visit nationalww2museum.org...

HELP US DISTRIBUTE "WE REMEMBER"
July 7th, 2013
Today, we launched our Indiegogo campaign to raise money to distribute our Holocaust documentary film "We Remember". Funds are needed to get this film out to schools, libraries, churches and temples all around the globe. You can help us share these stories with the world. In an era where people don't know who Hitler was and some world leaders deny the Holocaust happened, this film is important for everyone to see.
Click here to contribute to our Indiegogo campaign...

"WE REMEMBER" PREVIEW VIDEO
July 3rd, 2013

click here to watch video
At long last, a preview video of "We Remember" is now available. Last year, Scovil Productions worked with Springhill Avenue Temple students Victoria Hirsch and Cory Garfunkel to create this documentary about the lives of the Jewish people during the time of Hitler's reign. The full-length documentary is available on DVD in our shop.

"WE REMEMBER" SHOWING AT THE SOLOMON VICTORY THEATER JULY 14TH
June 5th, 2013
There will be a screening of "We Remember" at the Solomon Victory Theater (National WWII Museum) in New Orleans on July 14th at 6:00pm. Everyone is welcome to attend. For more information, contact the museum at 504-528-1944 ext. 229.

"WE REMEMBER" SHOWING AT THE FAIRHOPE PUBLIC LIBRARY APRIL 5TH
March 31st, 2013
The public is invited to a showing of "We Remember" at the Fairhope Public Library, April 5th, 1:00pm.

DVD SALE AT PAGE & PALETTE DURING ART FESTIVAL MARCH 15TH-17TH
March 6th, 2013
During the art festival in Fairhope, March 15th-17th, "We Remember" DVDs will be on sale for $20 each exclusively at the Page & Palette.

PRESS

HOLOCAUST DOCUMENTARY MADE IN MOBILE TO BE SHOWN
AT WWII MUSEUM IN NEW ORLEANS

AL.com, by Carol McPhail, July 1st, 2013

MOBILE, Alabama – "We Remember," a documentary on the Holocaust that includes interviews conducted by two young Mobilians, will be screened this month at the National WWII Museum in New Orleans.

The screening is set for 6 to 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, July 14, at the museum, located at 945 Magazine St.

Victoria Hirsch and Cory Garfunkel, members of the youth group at Springhill Avenue Temple in Mobile, wrote and conducted the interviews for the documentary, which relates the personal experiences of six people during the time of Nazi totalitarianism in the 1930s and 1940s. All six have ties to Mobile.

The film was produced locally by filmmaker Gary Scovill, and Kimberly and Stanley Zimmerman.

Hirsch and Garfunkel will introduce the film prior to the screening. Hirsch is a pre-med major at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. Garfunkel is studying astrophysics at Auburn University.

The museum event requires an RSVP, which can be completed online or by calling 504-528-1944 x229.



YOUTH-LED HOLOCAUST DOCUMENTARY FROM MOBILE AT NATIONAL WWII MUSEUM
SJLMag.com, June 30th, 2013

A documentary that was the product of the Springhill Avenue Federation of Temple Youth in Mobile will be screened at the National World War II Museum in New Orleans on July 14 at 6 p.m.

"We Remember: A Documentary" was developed by SHAFTY members Victoria Hirsch and Cory Garfinkel and describes the events of the Holocaust from the perspectives of a range of people living on the Gulf Coast.

The project began when Rickie Voit introduced Stan Zimmerman to Agnes Tennenbaum, a Holocaust survivor and author who had moved to Mobile in 2006. Tennenbaum is author of "A Girl Named Rose: My Holocaust Journey," and has spoken extensively throughout the area about her experiences in Auschwitz.

The original idea was to preserve her story on film, and Springhill Avenue Rabbi Donald Kunstadt suggested the youth group get involved.

Zimmerman had been working with documentary producer Gary Scovil, who knew Hilmar von Campe, who had been a member of Hitler Youth and served in the German military. Von Campe, who died last summer, spoke out against totalitarianism and the ideologies he had been part of in his youth.

James Philpot, a local veteran who was among the first American troops to enter Dachau, was interviewed. In April, he was officially presented with a Bronze Star he was awarded in 1962 but had never received.

Hirsch's grandmother gave the perspective of an American Jew who was living in those times. Von Campe's sister, Sibylle von Campe Heidrich, and Springhill Avenue Temple member Roland Fry gave their perspectives, and the stories from the six participants were woven together for the film.

Hirsch and Garfinkel conducted the interviews. The film debuted in Mobile in November and has been screened in venues in the area since then. The students will introduce the film at the museum.



FILM 'WE REMEMBER' RELATES MOBILIANS' ACCOUNTS OF HOLOCAUST
By Carol McPhail, AL.com, April 3rd, 2013
Click here to read this article on AL.com...


Victoria Hirsch and Cory Garfunkel, members of the youth group at Springhill Avenue Temple in Mobile, Alabama, wrote and conducted the interviews for the Holocaust documentary, "We Remember," released in November 2012.
FAIRHOPE, Alabama – In a small conference center at the Fairhope Public Library, Agnes Tennenbaum and James Philpot watched themselves on film relating the horrors of the Nazi concentration camps – Tennenbaum as an Auschwitz survivor and Philpot as a U.S. Army soldier who helped liberate Dachau.

"It's unbelievable. People that say it never happened surely were not anywhere near there," Philpot said in the opening moments of the documentary "We Remember."

Produced locally and released in November, "We Remember" calls on six local eyewitnesses to tell their personal experiences in the 1930s and 1940s during the time of Nazi totalitarianism. Interviewing Tennenbaum, Philpot and others in the documentary are Mobile teens Victoria Hirsch and Cory Garfunkel, members of the youth group at Springhill Avenue Temple.

The film, produced locally by Gary Scovil, and Kimberly and Stanley Zimmerman, was shown Friday at the library’s Giddens Conference Center to about 50 viewers, including local residents and students. The viewing sets the stage for Yom HaShoah, or Holocaust Remembrance Day, which begins Sunday evening.

Two years in the making

"We Remember" was two years in the making. It began, said Stanley Zimmerman, when the Mobile Area Jewish Federation approached him about shooting some archival footage of the remaining Holocaust survivors and World War II veterans. Zimmerman reached out to his sister-in-law, who was adviser to the youth group, and Scovil, a filmmaker with a studio in Fairhope.

Garfunkel and Hirsch, officers in the youth group, signed on to the project in 2010.

"I became involved with this project because I believe that preserving the truth about the events of World War II and the Holocaust is of utmost importance, especially since there are so many skeptics," said Hirsch. "I believe that being aware of the evil that human beings are capable of inflicting upon one another is the only way to prevent such events from ever happening again."

Hirsch is now a freshman pre-med major at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. Garfunkel, meanwhile, is studying astrophysics at Auburn University.

"I'm not sure Victoria and I knew what we were getting ourselves into, but I'm pretty sure I speak for both of us when I say that this project -- which from those first meetings to our official screening took just over two years -- turned into an amazing number of experiences that we'll never forget," he said.

The teens wrote and conducted all the interviews, fitting the work in after school and on the weekends. They drove across Mobile Bay to Fairhope almost every day after classes at UMS-Wright Preparatory School, said Kim Zimmerman. "I think we should celebrate Cory's and Victoria's zest for seeing an opportunity, realizing it would involve a lot of work and saying, 'I'm going to do it anyway,'" she said.

In addition to Tennenbaum and Philpot, the teens interviewed Hilmar von Campe, a German solder; his sister Sibylle von Campe Heidrich, then a German citizen; Roland Gup Fry, a U.S. intelligence officer; and Violet Hirsch, an American hospital volunteer. Since the documentary was filmed, von Campe, has died, a fact that emphasizes the importance of the project.

"This is the most difficult film I have ever worked on," Scovil, the producer, wrote of the documentary. "Many times while editing the footage I had to stop because I could not see the computer screen through my tears."

The local footage was filmed at Tennenbaum's and Philpot's homes in Mobile and at the temple using a single camera, which had to be repositioned to film the interviewers and interviewees. That footage is mixed with historical footage to more fully portray the horrors that Jews and others faced under the Nazi regime. Because some of the images are graphic, the film isn’t intended for young children.

Stan Zimmerman said the group gave Tennenbaum, as the only concentration camp survivor, the most input on the project. "We had to portray what she felt was relevant," he said. "She insisted the story had to be told correctly."

My mother's hand

"Many times while editing the footage I had to stop because I could not see the computer screen through my tears,"¯ said filmmaker Gary Scovil.

In the film, Tennenbaum, who grew up in Hungary, tells how the Auschwitz guards shaved her long blond hair and separated her and her mother into different groups.

"One minute I had my mother's hand in my hand. The next minute she was gone. And I was directed to go to the right side, so I did," she said in the film.

During her time at the camp, Tennenbaum came into almost daily contact with Josef Mengele, the "Angel of Death," who was a German SS officer and physician who conducted cruel experiments on camp prisoners.

"I saw him every morning," she recalled.

Philpot talks about his time in combat in Europe, how he earned the Bronze Star and how his unit came upon the concentration camp at Dachau.

"They were located away from the city, and of course, the Germans who were there had never heard of a concentration camp," he said. "The first thing I 'saw' was the smell. It was absolutely horrible. The incinerators were running day and night."

The soldiers were warned not to give the sick prisoners anything to eat, which could have killed them. They also had to contain the survivors in the camp until they could be treated medically. "This was a very difficult thing to do," he said. The soldiers made a milkshake substance out of concentrated eggs, milk and sugar to feed them.

A different kind of documentary

"We Remember" is different from some other films on the Holocaust because it includes stories from the pre-war years as well as the tales of how those interviewed eventually made their way to -- or back to -- America.

"We wanted to focus on life before, during and after the war as well," explained Garfunkel in the introduction.

Tennenbaum, for instance, recovered at a U.S. camp in Europe after the war, was married and migrated to New York to be with relatives. In recent years, she moved to Mobile from Arizona. In 2010, Tennenbaum wrote "A Girl Named Rose," a book about a girl who died of tuberculosis in the camp.

"To me, it didn’t seem like it was as depressing as watching some of the other Holocaust films," said Carol Zimmerman, a temple member who attended the event. "Life did go on for some."

Following the showing of the film on Friday, Tennenbaum and Philpot took questions about their experiences. Louise Bowen, 72, of Fairhope, shed tears as she expressed her appreciation for a chance to meet the Auschwitz survivor.

"I am very happy you are here,” responded Tennenbaum, 90.

(DVDs of "We Remember" can be purchased on the website www.werememberfilm.com.)



MOBILE EVENTS TO MARK HOLOCAUST REMEMBERANCE DAY
AL.com, by Carol McPhail, April 3rd, 2013


A stained glass panel representing the Holocaust is shown at the Ben May Chapel of Springhill Avenue Temple in 2000 in Mobile, Alabama. (Springhill Avenue Temple)
MOBILE, Alabama – Two upcoming events in coastal Alabama will mark Yom HaShoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day. The day, which begins on the evening of April 7, commemorates the millions of Jews who died at the hands of the Nazis in the 1930s and 1940s.

On Friday, April 5, the documentary "We Remember" will be screened at 1 p.m. at the Fairhope Public Library, 501 Fairhope Ave. in Fairhope. The film tells the personal stories of those who witnessed the horrors of the Hitler regime.

On Sunday, April 7, the Mobile Christian-Jewish Dialogue will hold a Yom HaShoah Commemoration Program at Ahavas Chesed synagogue, 705 Regents Way in Mobile. The program will begin at 7 p.m.



SPRINGHILL AVENUE YOUTH TO PREMIERE HOLOCAUST-ERA DOCUMENTARY
Southern Jewish Life Magazine, November 2nd, 2012

In 2009, Rickie Voit introduced Stan Zimmerman to Agnes Tennenbaum, a Holocaust survivor and author who had moved to Mobile in 2006. Tennenbaum is author of "A Girl Named Rose: My Holocaust Journey," and has spoken extensively throughout the area about her experiences. They wanted to see about preserving her story on film.

After two years of work by a group of volunteers and the Springhill Avenue Federation of Temple Youth, "We Remember" will debut on Nov. 10, the anniversary of Kristallnacht.

When the idea was first mentioned, Zimmerman was working with documentary producer Gary Scovil. In discussing the project with community leaders, Springhill Avenue Rabbi Donald Kunstadt suggested that the youth group get involved, and shape the story so it has a hopeful ending.

Two of the SHAFTY members, Victoria Hirsch and Cory Garfunkel, volunteered for the project and they started to develop the story.

Scovil knew Hilmar von Campe, who had been a member of Hitler Youth and served in the German military. Von Campe, who died this past June, spoke out against totalitarianism and the ideologies he had been part of in his youth.

Zimmerman knew Jim Philpot, an American veteran who was one of the first troops to enter Dachau. They also decided to interview Hirsch's grandmother, Violet, to get the perspective of an American Jew from that time period.

Hirsch and Garfunkel conducted the interviews for the film. As the interviews began, they met von Campe's sister, Sibylle von Campe Heidrich, and Springhill Avenue Temple member Roland Fry came forward to tell his experiences during the war. The film documents those six participants, describing that time period from their different perspectives and showing the human spirit to live.

The entire community is invited to the premiere, which will be at 6:30 p.m. at Springhill Avenue Temple.

The premiere is presented in association with the Gulf Coast Center for Holocaust and Human Rights Education, the Alabama Gulf Coast Holocaust Library and the Mobile Area Jewish Federation. DVDs will be available at a discount for the premiere, and there will be an Agnes Tennenbaum book signing. Donations to SHAFTY are welcomed, and proceeds will go toward the NFTY-South spring conclave in 2013 that Springhill Avenue will host.

SHAFTY advisor Kimberly Zimmerman said “we hope to have the documentary used for educational purposes, perhaps included in Holocaust curriculum and use filming as a method of teaching historical events."

She said the response from advance screenings "has been incredible" and "we are very excited to show our film to our community."

PHOTOS

JUST A FEW MORE QUESTIONS: GARY INTERVIEWS AGNES
January 20th, 2014
The last week of December 2013, producer Gary Scovil went back to visit Agnes to ask further questions regarding her book A Girl Named Rose.


"WE REMEMBER" SHOWING AT SOLOMON VICTORY THEATER
July 14th, 2013
Today, "We Remember" was shown at the National WWII Museum's Solomon Victory Theater at 6:00pm. Present at the showing were interviewers Victoria Hirsch and Cory Garfunkel who gave opening statements before the film and a questions and answers session after. Present in the audience was interviewee James Philpot and producers Gary Scovil, Kimberly Zimmerman, and Stanley Zimmerman. It was a great honor. A big thank you to everyone that attended, we hope you all enjoyed it!
Click here to visit nationalww2museum.org...


"WE REMEMBER" SHOWING AT THE FAIRHOPE PUBLIC LIBRARY
April 5th, 2013
A showing of We Remember was held at the Fairhope Public Library on April 5th. Don Berry, Ph.D. was present to give an opening statement before the film. Afterwards was a questions and answers session with interviewees James Philpot (aided in the liberation of Dachau) and Agnes Tennenbaum (survivor of Auschwitz).



"WE REMEMBER" PREMIERE
November 10th, 2012
We Remember prepiered at the Springhill Avenue Temple in Mobile, Alabama. Present were interviewers Victoria Hirsch and Cory Garfunkel. All of the interviewees were present, save for Hilmar von Campe who passed away in June, 2012. Producers Gary Scovil, Kimberly Zimmerman, and Stanley Zimmerman also attended the premiere.



PRODUCTION
Photos taken during the production of "We Remember".


INTERVIEWERS

VICTORIA HIRSCH
Born and raised in Mobile, Alabama, Victoria graduated from UMS-Wright Preparatory School in 2012 and now currently attends the Honor Program at the University of Alabama in Birmingham as at HESS-Abrams Scholarship recipiant, where she is majoring in psychology with plans to become a child psychiatrist. Victoria loves spending time with her family and friends, enjoys helping others, and is very passionate about environmental issues. Aside from interviewing Agnes Tennenbaum and her grandmother Violet Hirsch, she also co-wrote and co-directed this documentary.

CORY GARFUNKEL
Cory was born and raised in Mobile, Alabama and graduated from UMS-Wright Preparatory School in 2012 with great academic accomplishments. Cory is proud to be a Boy Scout where he attained the admirable title of Eagle Scout. Cory was a dedicated member of his high school's Key Club and was on the board for the Temple's youth group. Currently, Cory attends Auburn University where he is pursuing a career in astrophysics.


PRODUCERS

GARY SCOVIL
An award-winning film producer, Gary brings three and a half decades of audio, television, and film production experience to the team. Starting his career as the owner of a recording studio in the 1980s, Gary has produced and audio engineered film soundtracks and musical albums for artists of every style. Gary did the audio engineering for the film Against Wind and Tide: A Cuban Odyssey, nominated for the Acadamy Award for Documentary Feature of 1982. He has produced weekly television shows for FOX and syndication. Gary wrote, shot and edited the film The Utopian Fairhope, winner of the Alabama Showcase Award by the Alabama International Film Festival and was also a featured film at the South Alabama Film Festival.

KIMBERLY ZIMMERMAN
Kim always dreamed of being the Temple Youth Group advisor. Growing up in Montgomery, Alabama, she was active in her Temple Youth Group where she met her husband, David Zimmerman, at a West SEFTY (Southeast Federation of Temple Youth) Convention. She is a graduate of Auburn University. David and Kim have two children Richard and Elizabeth. Kim taught Religious School at Temple Beth Or in Montgomery and is currently the SHAFTY (Springhill Avenue Federation of Temple Youth) advisor.

STANLEY ZIMMERMAN
Stanley has over 30 years of Executive Management, Information Systems and business continuity planning experience in healthcare, chemical petrol, public utilities, manufacturing, government, financial services and the entertainment industries. He built a technology consulting firm from yearly revenues of $2 million to $100 million in less than 10 years. He was a principal consultant supervising the project managers for a Fortune 500 Company working on disaster recovery planning. Stan has published three books as well as numerous articles in national publications.


CREDITS

PRODUCERS
Gary Scovil
Kimberly Zimmerman
Stanley Zimmerman
CAMERA
Max Scovil

FILM SCORE
Brian Keane
PLAYBILL, GRAPHICS, & WEB DESIGN
Brooke Scovil

SPECIAL THANKS

Andres Aviles
Cathy Beir
Dina von Campe
Don Berry
Rabbi & Mrs. Irving Bloom
Shirley Boyd
Susie Broos
Milton & Margaret Brown
Jerry Darring
Ann Daves
Holly DeHaan
Carol Eberlein
Cheryl B Flock
Carrie Friduss
Gerald & Kay Friedlander
Jean Fry

Gary & Jeanne Garfunkel
Fay Gold
George Allen Haas
Alan & Lisa Hirsch
Onn Halfon
Mike Jefferson
Heidi Kinsella
Christine Koehler
Rabbi & Mrs. Donald Kunstadt
Sally Garrett leBourgeois
Robert Lyle
Paul Martinez
Don Mecke
Tootie Miller
Michael & Alicia Pereira
Mike Ripps

Nikki & Carolyn Rothschild
Inez Toney
Caroline Philpot
Jay & Shelia Ross
Corky Richard
Robert Runderson
Henry & Dianne Schwarzberg
Abby Sealy
Rabbi Steven Silberman
Barry Silverman
John Tyson, Sr.
Rickie Voit
David Zimmerman
Robert Zimmerman
Steve & Carol Zimmerman
Mike & Lisa Zoghby


VERY SPECIAL THANKS
SHAFTY: SPRINGHILL AVENUE FEDERATION OF TEMPLE YOUTH
Cory Garfunkel
Victoria Hirsch
Maring Eberlein
Katherine Miles
Kelsey Kunstadt
Ariel Denson
Richard Zimmerman
Elizabeth Zimmerman
Ethan Michaelis
A.J. Pereira
Sam Eberlein
Matt Friduss
Marissa Friduss
Madison Friduss
Miller Eberlein
Daniel Kinsella
Steven Hirsch
Rebecca Denson

SHOP

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WE REMEMBER DVD
You can also schedule a pick-up of this item. Please call 251-650-4074 to schedule a pick-up date and time at 8390 Gayfer Road Ext, Fairhope AL 36532. We accept credit/debit cards, cash or check at pick-up.

$20 + $4.99 shipping
Also available in the Springhill Avenue Temple giftshop.
A GIRL NAMED ROSE BY AGNES TENNENBAUM
Agnes Tennenbaum's book, mentioned in the documentary. In it, she tells her story of how she survived the Holocaust and describes her experiences as she passed through German occupation, the ghetto, the transport in a cattle car, internment in Auschwitz and Allendorf, liberation, the displaced persons camp, and emigration to the United States.
Click here to purchase from Amazon.com.
Click here to purchase from Barnes & Noble.
WE REMEMBER PREMIERE PLAYBILL
The playbill from the premiere of the film on November 10th, 2012. The playbill is free to view and download.
CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE PDF
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