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‘Silenced Shame’: Hungarian Women Remember Wartime Rapes

2013. november 25. 15:13

Skrabski’s film, financed with a grant from the Hungarian government, investigates the atrocities committed by Red Army soldiers during their takeover of Hungary in 1944 and 1945.

2013. november 25. 15:13
Lynn Joyce Hunter

"BUDAPEST – Last month when a Polish art student installed a life-sized sculpture in a Gdansk public square of a Red Army soldier raping a pregnant woman, his activism provoked a storm of angry reactions from Russians and Poles. Critics claimed that the image of a serviceman holding a gun to a woman’s head dishonored the memory of Soviet troops and was an inappropriate commemoration of victims of wartime rape. Both the shame and the denial voiced during the Gdansk incident are typical responses to any reminder of the mass rapes perpetrated by Red Army troops during World War II, says Hungarian filmmaker Fruzsina Skrabski, whose documentary “Silenced Shame” was shown earlier this month at the 13th Hungarian Film Festival in Los Angeles.

Skrabski’s film, financed with a grant from the Hungarian government, investigates the atrocities committed by Red Army soldiers during their takeover of Hungary in 1944 and 1945 and the tyranny of silence that followed under Communism.

I met with Skrabski and the film’s producer, Zoltan Janovics, who helped translate the conversation, in a café in Budapest, to talk about the film, which has been aired on Hungarian television and shown in public theaters here.

Skrabski filmed survivors of wartime rape, women in their 80s and 90s, as they spoke publicly about their traumas for the first time in 65 years. “These women who gave interviews are heroes,” she tells me. “They don’t want young women to forget” what happened to them."

Mandiner éves előfizetés féléves áron!

Összesen 13 komment

A kommentek nem szerkesztett tartalmak, tartalmuk a szerzőjük álláspontját tükrözi. Mielőtt hozzászólna, kérjük, olvassa el a kommentszabályzatot.
Sorrend:
nagykutya
2014. december 04. 06:50
Yes, well this kind of thing is normal when being liberated by one of the great democracies. This and the mass murder of the civilian population. Definitely not examined at Nuremberg, since it is well known that only germans commit war crimes.
kulalak
2013. november 29. 12:10
Thank you for the promotion of the movie and this shared remembering! Everything helps.
Senye Péter
2013. november 29. 12:10
And the worst of it was the silence, silence and silence.
gereb6
2013. november 25. 21:36
Philosopher Mikhail Szavelij: "One thing I know for sure, I do not know anything."
Jelenleg csak a hozzászólások egy kis részét látja. Hozzászóláshoz és a további kommentek megtekintéséhez lépjen be, vagy regisztráljon!