New Jersey Stage October 2014 | Page 38

father survived with his father and her mother survived with two sisters. She knows how lucky she is that they made the choice to live. “I was lucky because my parents chose life,” said Dorfman. “They chose to live, to have children, to raise a Jewish family, and to be part of the American Dream. They stayed connected to who they were and never forgot where they came from, but they embraced life. And that is a very different story than many survivors and people that they know who lived and came to America.” Stories of the Holocaust were often told in her household while growing up. They inspired conversation with aunts and uncles who were held in various concentration camps. Her mother made sure that the family watched every movie and read each book on the subject. Carolyn struggled to deal with it, often experiencing nightmares imagining what the experience was like for her mother. At 15, her mother was taken away from everything that she knew. Carolyn internalized these feelings, trying to hide how painful “I was lucky because my parents chose to live, to have children, to raise a Jewish family, and to be part of the American Dream.” ---Carolyn Dorfman New Jersey Stage October 2014 pg 38