PodcastsHistoryOlga, Erika, and me

Olga, Erika, and me

Ilanit Michele Woods
Olga, Erika, and me
Latest episode

6 episodes

  • Olga, Erika, and me

    Part 1: What a Dirty Lie

    09/1/2025 | 44 mins.
    "My life has not been a straightforward line; it has been more like a rough road full of bumps."

    1930s - 1944

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
  • Olga, Erika, and me

    Part 2: The Glass Heeled Shoes

    09/1/2025 | 40 mins.
    "He lifted the wire without a word. I crawled through, quickly picked some flowers and crawled back in."

    June 1944 - September 1944

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
  • Olga, Erika, and me

    Part 3: Dominoes

    09/1/2025 | 48 mins.
    "I was standing in front of a huge machine covered in oil with various instruments on it."

    September 1944 - April 1945

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
  • Olga, Erika, and me

    Part 4: Liberation

    09/1/2025 | 43 mins.
    "A white sheet was waving in the wind on the building opposite us."

    April 1945 - July 1945

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
  • Olga, Erika, and me

    Part 5: Home

    09/1/2025 | 38 mins.
    "I had been sitting deep in thought for a while when I lifted my head and I noticed next to me an old man wearing glasses and holding a stick."

    July 1945 - November 1945

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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About Olga, Erika, and me

Ilanit-Michele had been born and raised in the Jewish faith. But like her own mother Erika, she felt her faith had been force fed to her by her grandmother, Olga. As a young adult, Ilanit-Michele chose to minimise the Jewish aspects of her identity, and find her own path.Then Olga’s memoir resurfaced in a box after her death, its first page specifically dedicated to her daughter and granddaughter. It told a tale of growing up in 1930s Hungary, surviving years in Auschwitz and other camps, and discovering at the war’s end that her family had been almost completely obliterated. Olga had never revealed the full story to anyone during her lifetime, and the manuscript had lain in its box for over twenty years. Moved by the discovery, Ilanit-Michele and her mother began absorbing the story. They had it translated from Hungarian, went to visit the locations it mentioned and recorded the impact it had on their own views of family, history, faith and identity. Through travel, dialogue, interviews and reading out excerpts of Olga’s story, the lives of these three generations of women were rebraided, the tapestry of the family repaired and its Jewish heritage reconsidered. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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