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Ella Dreyfus’s tale of survival, regret and reclamation

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Published: 2 November 2021

Last updated: 4 March 2024

The Balmain artist’s documentary has a simple aim: to tells the German people what happened to two little boys who escaped

IN HER NEW documentary Balmain artist Ella Dreyfus wants “to tell the German people what happened to two little boys who escaped”.

One of those boys who escaped Nazi Germany as war clouds gathered in May 1939 was her father, Richard. The other was his little brother, George. Their parents – Hilde and Alfred – were secular German Jews.

The film, Dreyfus Drei, premieres in a Berlin theatre tomorrow morning Sydney time, and online simultaneously.

“My aim through this film is to open up a dialogue for subsequent generations to confront their inherited traumas and reclaim our Jewish lives in Germany,” says Dreyfus.

Dreyfus Drei is not about the boys’ arrival in Melbourne or their time in a Jewish orphanage before their parents joined them just as war broke out. Rather it addresses intergenerational trauma and Ella Dreyfus’s long-held dread of Germany.

Making the film, she says she “reclaimed” Berlin’s playgrounds and city farms in the names of her late father and her uncle, 94.

The film was shot on location in Sydney, Melbourne and Germany. It follows the artist to a cemetery and to children’s play areas in Berlin where she spells out the phrases “We are Jews” and “Our Name is Dreyfus” in German in colourful felt lettering.

FULL STORY Emigrant tale of survival, regret and reclamation (SMH)

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Photo: Ella Dreyfus (Kate Geraghty/SMH)

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