They Left It All Behind: Trauma, Loss, and Memory Among Eastern European Jewish Immigrants and their Children


Book Announcement by Hannah Hahn (USA)

Trauma was a potent influence in the lives of pre-1924 Eastern European Jewish immigrants. They uprooted themselves because of grinding poverty, anti-Semitic discrimination, pogroms, and the violence of World War I. This book’s psychoanalytically-informed life stories, based on 22 in-depth interviews with the immigrants’ adult children, tell the tales of these immigrants and their children.

Many of the children believed their parents had left their lives in Eastern Europe behind them. This disavowal – aided by the immigrants’ silence and denial – allowed their children to minimize the trauma and loss their parents suffered both before and after immigrating. Trauma and loss affected the transmission of memory, and, consequently, often immigrants’ recollections were not passed on to future generations. In this Rowman & Littlefield title, Hannah Hahn analyzes the impact of parental trauma and loss on the second generation.

The topics of trauma and loss in the lives of Eastern European immigrants are also relevant in understanding current immigrants to America. Often immigrants’ children tried to repay the debt that they felt was incurred by their parents’ sacrifices. Resilience, accomplishment, and their transition from their immigrant parents’ world to their own full participation in the American milieu characterized the adult lives of the immigrants’ children.

https://rowman.com/ISBN/9781442254237/They-Left-It-All-Behind-Trauma-Loss-and-Memory-Among-Eastern-European-Jewish-Immigrants-and-their-Children

Hannah Hahn, Ph.D. maintains a full-time private practice in New York City. After graduate-level work in English literature, she obtained a master’s in psychology from Harvard University, a PhD in clinical psychology from Columbia University, and psychoanalytic certification from the Institute for Contemporary Psychotherapy, where she currently supervises. She taught attachment at the New York Institute for Psychoanalytic Training in Infancy, Childhood, and Adolescence. Her publications and presentations include “They Left it All Behind” in M. O’Loughlin’s The Ethics of Remembering and the Consequences of Forgetting (2015) and “A Safe Place to Stand: The Holding Environment with Child Patients and Their Parents” (2005).

Hannah Hahn, Ph.D.
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