Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Responsibility and Healing at Camp Föhrenwald, Wolfratshausen, Germany

Dr. Dan Booth Cohen, Facilitator
Eve-Marie Schaffer, Co-Facilitator
Alexandra Senfft, Guest Speaker
Brigitta Mahr, Organizer
Dr. Karen Cramer, Translator
February 27 – March 1, 2009

Overview

This 3-day seminar near Munich, Germany took place at the former site of Föhrenwald, a Displaced Persons camp for Jewish Holocaust survivors.

Among the 40 participants were several children of Jewish Holocaust survivors and many children of Nazi perpetrators. Each of us came to Föhrenwald in search of healing and understanding for a part of ourselves or the essence of a loved-one who lives inside of us.

Part of us cannot find peace or come to rest. In the silence of our dreams, in our restless thoughts, in the darkest places in our hearts, the terrible experiences that befell our fathers and mothers, grandparents, aunts and uncles live on inside us. They appear as nightmares or panic attacks, forgetfulness or sorrow.


These dark influences also motivate our kindness and compassion, propelling us to be healers, peacemakers, and teachers. We honor our ancestors’ losses and soothe their pain by embracing that we are the living fruit of their sacrifices. They grieve when their suffering becomes ours. They bless us when we take our good lives and live well.

Our experiences together gave us what we sought. We began with three images from the Nazi era: a small boy clinging to his mother’s leg in the Jewish Ghetto, a teenage boy at the mouth of his own grave begging for mercy, and a hate-filled, cold-hearted soldier who killed without mercy.

The archetypes of “Silence,” “Terror,” and “Consequences” dominated this bereft landscape. The healing process required everyone and everything that belonged to be seen and named. This allowed unbearable grief to be felt and exchanged.

Mutually shared grief, in the company of “Life,” “Truth,” and “Destiny,” exposed the buried wounds. When we concluded, the children of those who fought and died stood connected by the energy of love and forgiveness.


Friday Night Talk

On the first night, Alexandra Senfft discussed her best-selling book, Schweigen Tut Weg (Silence Hurts). Her grandfather, Hanns Ludin, was a high-ranking member of the Nazi elite. He was executed as a war criminal in 1947.

The family never dared to speak openly about his crimes. Senfft described how the silence surrounding her grandfather's crimes made it impossible for the family to grieve and heal. To this day, most of Alexandra's extended family subscribe to the conspiracy of silence and denial. The repression of the truth and distortion of facts had far-reaching destructive effects. Schweigen is the silence of denial. Events are not spoken of and the truth is shrouded in a fog.


Similar dynamics occur in many German families. One sibling feels compelled to search for hidden facts, holds an affinity for Jewish people and themes, or is troubled by emotions that connect them with the victims of Nazism. They often are alienated from the family-at-large which stands with Silence, claiming their ancestors were not involved in Nazi crimes. These descendants express disinterest or opposition to examining the events of the past, and strive to put a good face on themselves and their families without delving into the messiness of troubling emotions.

In many Jewish families, quite a different dynamic exists. The effects of two millennia of dispersion and persecution, manifested in the 20th century by the Russian pogroms, Nazi Holocaust, and Israeli wars result in a persistent and pervading belief that Jews must survive amidst violent enemies who are determined to exterminate them. “They all want to kill us,” is how one Jewish participant summarized her attitude towards her enemies past, present, and future.

More than 60 years after the end of the Nazi regime, the echoes of that traumatic period continue to affect countless individuals and our global human community. Alexandra’s heartfelt talk sparked the love, compassion, and blessing that can grow from the bond between victims and perpetrators and their descendants.

Opening Introductions

Our group gathered the morning following Alexandra Senfft’s talk to search for healing movements for ourselves, our families, and humanity as a whole. Our tools were compassionate listening, Family Constellations, and Eve-Marie Schaffer's expressive creativity process called Painting-From-the-Inside-Out.

We opened the morning with a round of introductions and sharing where each person was invited to say a bit about themselves and what brought them to Föhrenwald.


Many of the German participants were the one sibling in their families who actively addressed the weight of their family’s Nazi past. Several knew or suspected a secret connection to Jewish lineage. Others were confronted by mysterious events, such as the woman whose uncle survived the War then committed suicide in 1946. Over the years, she asked herself many times, “What had he done or witnessed that drove him to take his life?”

One woman told us her father was a low-level soldier who only followed orders and performed his duties. That was her “truth” until he died. That was when she discovered from hidden papers that he was Commandant of a death camp where tens of thousand of Jews were murdered.

Another woman’s father never uttered a word. She, too, found the secret stash of hidden papers that many former soldiers left behind at their deaths. It contained two envelopes postmarked during the war days. The letters had been discarded and the envelopes saved as relics, holding memories and meanings that died with him. What did they contain? Were there clues to the mystery of her current struggles?

Several participants came by themselves after seeing the workshop announcement. One was a young woman named “Grace” who told us her panic attacks were becoming more frequent. Abstract drawings she made in an art therapy process contained disturbing images. A a series of vivid dreams contained images of a small boy of about 6 years of age who was trapped in a crowed Ghetto scene. In one nightmare, a Nazi soldier kicked the boy in the head.

As we went around, these stories filled the space. A man explained, “My father did not participate in the Holocaust, but he was a virulent Jew-hater.”

A woman who only heard about the event a few days earlier came from a town in eastern Germany near Dresden. “My father was an SS guard. He was unrepentant until he died. His hatred and murderous impulses frighten me. His sister was handicapped. She was taken away and killed. No one spoke about her, but I think she is important to understanding him.”


A woman who leads group workshops said she cannot remember people's names. She feels it relates to silence and her family's unspoken Nazi past. Another said her father was unknown; she suspected he was Jewish.

The Constellation

With the circle of introductions complete, I contemplated how to begin the Constellation. I suggested we start with two abstract elements: the boy and soldier who appeared in the nightmare. I invited anyone to stand in the Constellation representing themselves, another person, or an abstract element. People could join at their own pace (or not), move in or out of the Constellation as they chose and announce who they were standing for.

First, a woman came out of her chair and curled up on the floor. Another moved into the center of the circle. The woman who had difficulty remembering names stood up and threw herself around the leg of the woman in the center, announcing she was representing the 6-year old boy holding tightly to her mother.

The circle filled slowly. Someone stood in for “Silence.” Another for “Consequences.” “Life.” “Truth.”

One of the Jewish women stood for her uncle Motl who at age 16 had been taken by Nazi soldiers from his home. They brought him to the woods where he and the other young men of his neighborhood were forced to dig a ditch, fill it with lime, and stand in front of it. The Nazi firing squad shot the boys into the ditch and covered them over.

Standing in his place, the niece filled with the terror and confusion of his last moments before a Nazi bullet stopped his breath. Motl called out, “Don’t shoot me. I didn’t do anything. I didn’t hurt anyone.” He pleaded, “Please don’t kill me!” Some minutes later, a silent shot rang out. Motl screamed. His representative collapsed to the floor. The emotions that emerged were authentic in their intensity and tenor. (In actuality, this woman’s mother, Motl’s sister, had lived at Föhrenwald in 1946.)

The woman who lived near Dresden stood in for her father the Nazi perpetrator. Grace, the woman who saw the boy and soldier in her dream, stood in for herself. Gradually, the Constellation filled until we had about 25 participants in the circle.

A man stood in for “Terror.” A woman stood for “Hope.”

My role is to give room for the truth to emerge and also to feel for movements that guide the memories of suffering and loss towards healing. We have all encountered terrifying nightmares and moments of unbearable suffering. The Constellation is not for gratuitously recreating these sorrows, but for passing through them en route towards reconnecting with love, growth and acceptance.

At my suggestion, the representative for the 6 year-old boy asked the mother, “Who is that? What is her name?”

The mother asked the representative, “What is your name?” When the representative answered, the mother replied to the son, “She stands for Life.”

The boy said, “You stand for Life. I know your name.” In this way, the mother and boy traveled through the entire Constellation naming everyone and everything that belonged.

“Who is that, mother?”

“Who are you?”

“I am Motl. I am a 16 year-old boy stolen from my house, brought to the woods, shot into a lime-filled ditch that I had dug. Why did they kill me? I never hurt anyone.”

The mother back to the son, “This is Motl.”

Then the boy, “You are Motl. I know your name.”

With these words, Motl was overcome with a wave of sobbing tears, grief for the loss of his life, the grief of the mother and sisters who couldn't save him, bury him, or recite the Kaddish at his grave. The sobs of grief mixed with deep and overwhelming gratitude for being seen, remembered and named.

The boy looked at the woman curled in a ball on the floor. A man had stood in and was kneeling at her back with his hands on her shoulders. “Mother, who is that?”

The mother asked, “What is your name?”

“I am the child who was never born. My mother was shot and killed when she was pregnant with me.”

The representative had been distressed and bereft until that point, but when Motl, the boy and his mother saw her, she was able to cry. She and Motl embraced in tears. Motl spoke Yiddish, offering her words of love and comfort. The sound of grief-stricken Yiddish, rarely heard anymore at Föhrenwald, opened the door towards resolution.

To the man at her back, “Mother who is that? What is his name?”

“What is your name?”

“I am who stays with you. You are not alone or forgotten.”

They continued to move through the circle. Motl and the child not born stood up, took hands and accompanied the boy.

“Who is that?”

“That is Silence....”

“I stand for Hope.”

“I stand for Terror.”

“I stand for the Truth.”

“I stand for the Consequences.”

"I am the energy of Love and Forgiveness."

Before the naming ritual, the representatives for Silence and Consequences occupied central positions, dominating this landscape of Föhrenwald’s soul. Silence was the antithesis of vocalizing the name of everything and everyone who belongs. When Silence stood strong, the Consequences gathered energy. The murdered children were alone in their agony. The soldier stood coldly.

Silence kept the overwhelming feelings of guilt and shame at bay. In hearing Motl’s death scream and feeling the terror of his last moments, one could understand why many survivors of the War, both German and Jewish preferred silence to expression. The truth was too painful, too shameful, too hard to bear. Silence created a dearth of emotion, but it could be understood as an effective coping strategy that serves ordinary life.

A representative stood behind Silence. He said he was both protecting silence and protected by silence. This suggested that while Silence serves the common good in allowing people freedom from overwhelming emotions, it has a negative effect on those family members who resonate with hidden truths.

We felt the many consequences of the silence of denial. Grieving is not complete. The truth is not known or understood. The ones who are responsible are not held to account; their descendants unconsciously carry their guilt. People who belong to the family are forgotten.
By its nature, Silence could not speak or react. As these movements unfolded, Life and Truth and others broke Silence's resolve. When Silence was broken, a flood of emotions came through. Silence then retreated outside the circle, taking on a benign quality of past events that were resolved and forgotten. The quality of the Consequences also shifted. Freed from alignment with Silence, Consequences became more at ease as everything and everyone who belonged was named and acknowledged.

The "Energy of Love and Forgiveness" gained strength as the process unfolded. She moved freely among the others, stopping in several places to exert influence where she felt it was needed.

We continued around the circle. Grace, the woman who first dreamed of the little boy told him her name, adding, “I could not forget you.”

Another representative told the Mother, “I do not know who I am. I am the one who has no name.” This representative appreciated the contact as she was brought into the group that now contained the boy and his mother, the baby never born, Motl, and the others. Something remained unresolved for her.

The boy and his mother, accompanied by the others, continued around the circle learning everyone’s name. The last un-named representative was standing near the edge of the circle. The boy said, “Mother who is that?”

The mother asked, “Who do you stand for?”

“I am the Nazi soldier. I have no regret.” This was spoken by the woman standing in for her father who had been an SS guard during the war. He was the one whose handicapped sister was taken away and killed.

Most of the representatives had gathered around the boy and his mother. They faced the soldier, who stood stiff and cold. I suggested that this soldier incorporated all the Nazi soldiers who belonged to the group. He was part of the firing squad that killed Motl; he was the one who shot the pregnant mother whose baby was unborn; he was the one who appeared in Grace’s dream and kicked the little boy in the head. He stood for all of them.

Only one representative stood between the boy and the soldier. She was Destiny. In was their fate to be cast together as victim and perpetrator by the larger historic and political forces that overtook Germany during the Nazi era. Destiny took each one’s hand linking them through their shared fate. The hands of Destiny joined them in the victim-perpetrator bond.

The representative for Life stood with the larger group aligned with the boy and the other victims. I asked her why she stood on one side and not with the other. She replied that the soldier had lost his connection to life through the many murders he committed.

Another representative said that the soldier was excluded from the circle of love and forgiveness because he was unrepentant. The soldier remained unmoved. He had executed his duties and felt no remorse for the damage done. Rather, his heart was closed to the suffering of others. All he felt was the bitter loneliness of his own pain.


The Constellation slowed to a full stop. Much had been said and many tears shed, tears of both grief and relief. The boy learned the names of everyone who belonged. Motl and the unborn baby, two nearly forgotten victims represented by actual living relatives, were grieved for and taken into the hearts of those who survived. The Nazi soldier faced his victims, confronting the damage he had caused. Yet, he remained apart from the others, linked to them only by their shared destiny.

Recalling the story of the soldier’s handicapped sister, a flash of insight sparked in me. I went to the representative who stood for the one who said, “I do not know who I am. I am the one who has no name.” I asked her, “Could you be the soldier’s handicapped sister?

She answered immediately, “Yes, of course. I am.”

With that recognition, she moved past the others, across the empty divide to face the soldier. She said to him, “I am your handicapped sister who was murdered.”

The soldier agreed. “You were always so happy and creative when we were small children. I loved you very much.” This was his personal tragedy behind his hardened façade.

The social engineers of the Third Reich instituted a policy to destroy the handicapped. Their goal was to cull the weak from the able-bodied to strengthen the Fatherland. After the sister was killed, her brother was put in a uniform, given a weapon, and ordered to kill many others. He fulfilled these orders disconnecting his thoughts and emotions from the place in his heart where his beloved sister survived. This is what alienated him from Life.

When these two came together embracing in tears and whispered yearnings, the larger group was able to cross the divide that had separated the victims from their perpetrator. The soldier confessed his love for his lost sister. Connecting to his grief and personal guilt allowed him to feel remorse for the lives he had taken.

The final movement in the Constellation was to create a single line of representatives for actual people. The boy, his mother, Motl, the unborn baby, the soldier and sister, and “Grace”, who dreamed them found their places together.

The abstract elements moved in around them. Silence retreated and his character changed from the suppression to stillness. The representative for the energy of Love and Forgiveness felt her strength grow with each step in the progression. At the end, her influence felt like a huge balloon that enveloped the whole tapestry.


The boy looked at everyone and everything that belonged to his destiny. He told his mother, “I see them all. I know their names. If I forget, Grace helps me remember.”

The Remainder of the Seminar

During the rest of the seminar, we focused on personal integration and expression. Eve-Marie Schaffer led the group in an experiential process that opened channels of creativity. We had time for a number of personal Constellations which followed the theme of the lingering repercussions of war, trauma, and secrecy.

“Grace” sent me a message afterwards giving me background about her dreams and artwork. She concluded:




“Of course the journey goes on… Yes, it might be nicer for me to not have these images and feelings inside. Still, this is just dipping a toe into the nightmare that a lot of people experienced. If bringing my images into the Constellation helped to foster healing on a larger scale, it is really worth it to see and feel all that.”

“Maybe a real soul came to tell me his story or maybe not – this does not matter. What is real is that the image has its own truth: There is love, blessing and compassion that connects us all.”
(Please read the comments for additional input and reflections from the participants. Feel free to add your own comments as well.)

10 comments:

  1. I was the representative standing for the “Truth.” Stepping in to the constellation, I made real eye contact with everyone except for “Silence.” “Consequences” and I felt very attracted to each other. I slowly found my place, coming to stand between Consequences and Silence. After a while Silence was able to look at me; scary!

    At that moment Truth said, “It does not matter. For ‘Truth’ there is no right and wrong. It’s only the truth.” Then Silence could look me in the eyes and use Truth as a bridge to connect with Consequences. Once Silence had contact with Truth and Consequences, for the first time, it could look at the boy, the unborn child and the rest.

    Almost the same happened with the Nazi soldier. Truth made contact with him and brought him to Consequences. The soldier said he was not afraid to look at “Truth, but was scared to death of “Consequences. Again Truth said. “There is no right or wrong. It is!” That made the soldier able to look at “Consequences.” From there, he could see his victims etc.

    In both cases “Silence” and the soldier had to look Truth and Consequences in the eyes first. That opened up for the healing process. Then they could make eye contact with other people.

    Before real movement and healing in the constellation started, Consequences said to the representatives (Boy, Mother, Motl, unborn Baby etc.), you are too busy looking at your self, at your one thing. It made Consequences very sad. That sadness changed after Silence started looking at the Boy, Motl etc.

    After the constellation, there was an insight that everyone is a victim (has victim energy). We all could recognize that. With that insight, came the feeling as well that with the victim energy, everyone also has perpetrator energy. Having the victims and perpetrators connected to each other and being aware of that insights, makes it possible to move towards healing and reconciliation.

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  2. It touched me very deeply that the little boy’s story was the entrance into a group healing experience that was beyond individuals, nations, religions, tribes.

    This little boy, Samuel, has been with me in pictures, images, and dreams for many years. In the beginning it didn’t make sense. Later, I understood that his coming to my consciousness was important for my personal development. Now I see a larger picture. It is a blessing. Because of him, we were able to do this healing work on a high level for so many people. It felt as if each one of us was transformed.

    Here are some details about the different steps through which he came into my life. In 1990, I was involved in an art therapy process. Recovered drawing was a very good tool to give my soul a voice. I painted without thinking – they just came out and had to do with what I felt inside. I couldn’t “understand” them because they did not correspond to my personal history.

    About ten years later (around 2001) I was treated by a dentist who used an osteopathic relaxation technique. During the short time when the muscles relaxed, I had a flashback in which I saw through the eyes of the little boy.

    The soldiers came to capture the family. He was screaming and crying and clinging to his mother’s legs trying to stand in the way of the soldiers to save his parents somehow. He was kicked with the soldier’s heavy military boot on the right side of his head. He fell against the wall at the entrance of the apartment – I even saw the colours and the pictures of the tapestry (green vertical thin stripes and in-between roses.). He blacked out for a few seconds. His mother, to save his life, stumbled towards him on the floor so she could whisper into his ear: “Do not move – make the others believe you are dead – I love you.”

    Then he fell unconscious again. When he woke up – there was absolute silence in the house - and because he was just a little boy – about 4 years old – and felt just lonely. He stepped out of the house trying to find another soul there. The next picture I saw were the wheels of a military jeep just besides him and again the boots of the soldier. He was also caught.

    All this came to me during the treatment in a very short time: I started crying. I couldn’t talk to the dentist – who was worried about me having too much pain. Well, this was worse.

    Following this, I had a series of images that came to me in the dreamlike state that comes sometimes in the dawning as I was just waking up. I saw the family together, the life together how they lived there in Berlin. The father was medical doctor; the mother likes to make music: playing the “fiddle.”

    Last year I did the constellation training with Albrecht Mahr. In a constellation I was looking at what stands between me and my father – why it was so difficult to reach him. In the constellation, I could see that my father was trying to point something out to his family and was trying to keep us children away from all that. The woman who stood for some of those he was pointing at felt physically sick. The smell of gas… dizziness.

    The morning after the constellation I woke up and told my partner (who was also doing the training), “I feel as if I survived the holocaust.” And, “I feel so much more connected to the people standing there for what my father was trying to show to the others. It feels like: This is my mother, although this is not true.” Then I remembered my experience at the dentist.

    This started a deep, multi-week process where all the pieces were coming together. I saw again the little boy’s story and I thought about what might be the message? What I should do to heal this? By night it came through dreams, by day during my work (I do bodywork – osteopathy, energy healing, and trauma healing through somatic experiencing.). I got more and more pieces. Don’t ask me how I could know all this to be true. It just was that I felt it is true from a deeper level.

    I found the time when this family was caught (during the Kristallnacht in 1938). I came to know their names. The boy’s name was Samuel, meaning, “God has listened.” I remembered the pictures I drew in 1990. I had almost forgotten them - and realized that it was the story of the boy. Looking at them again it was really that story. During this research for information about Samuel I found the “Kaddish.” I wrote it down and spoke these words in front of an altar I made in the name of Samuel – as he was the only son of his family. As I understood the tradition, it would be him that spoke these words for the dead parents. I wrote a card honouring the suffering and the murder of his family and promised never to forget them.

    The story has no direct connection to what my father’s family did – they never lived in Berlin, never did harm Jews themselves. But they were passive with all that having a more or less good life in that times. I guess that my fathers system as a baby (he was born in July 1938) was so receptive that he unconsciously sucked in this traumatic atmosphere. Somehow this information came into my system through him. Maybe through my own developmental trauma experiences this information came to surface and made me a kind “channel” for” it to heal my own experience of this issue around victim and perpetuator.

    Personal transformation: going through this process with Samuel being so close to me as a brother (actually he feels as close as a lost twin) brought a bigger view and deep experience and insights around having real power, being safe (before I never felt safe) and a feeling of deep peace inside beyond this polarity of victim-perpetuator, boy-girl, nationality, religion. And on this level of “the bigger picture” it is real that Samuel IS my brother. There I can see me as a little girl sitting there hand in hand with him, enjoying being, and having compassion with myself as well

    Since then I feel much more grounded and my container of holding the different poles at the same time increased a lot.

    Of course the journey goes on… Yes, it might be nicer for me to not have these images and feelings inside. Still, this is just dipping a toe into the nightmare that a lot of people experienced. If bringing my images into the Constellation helped to foster healing on a larger scale, it is really worth it to see and feel all that.

    Maybe a real soul came to tell me his story or maybe not – this does not matter. What is real is that the image has its own truth: There is love, blessing and compassion that connects us all.

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  3. Dear Dan, Thank you by heart for coming to Föhrenwald. It was a wonderful gift for me and i am sure it was a wonderful gift for many others living in Germany and other countries, suffering in a similar way from the consequences of the Nazi time.

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  4. I was the representative with “no name.” I stood in for a woman who had been left in the lurch by my father. I don’t know that woman's name. As the representative, being seen, telling them that I was without relation, and being integrated into the group was very important to me. I still was without a name, but being seen and included changed me a lot.

    Representing the handicapped sister of the soldier, I understood that I was standing for all women who were betrayed and abandoned. Their names were forgotten. When I asked the soldier, if he knew my name, he didn’t remember it. I told him I would accept any name. Because in that moment I realized, that the names of all those betrayed women were represented in my person. It reminded me a sentence told to me by one of my mentally retarded students: God has the face of all people.

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  5. I am absolutely glad I joined you at Föhrenwald. It was a very emotional and healing experience!

    It was my first experience in constellations; and I felt very free, warm and calm after the constellation.

    My grandfather was an SS-man in the Second World War. Until now I had only been at his cemetry at his funeral. But after I had reached my hand to the SS-man in the constellation, I felt I can go to my grandfather without any bad emotions!

    After the constellation in the meditation, I saw my mother – to whom I do not have an easy relationship – laughing. I feel that she is much more relaxed than before.

    And I was deeply impressed with the people joining the meeting in Föhrenwald; I found them all very warm, heartly and open-minded.

    Thank you for everything!

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  6. Ich stimme aus ganzem Herzen zu: es war eine heilsame Arbeit, die getan worden ist. Auch Dir der Dank für Dein Engagement.

    Neben all dem, was schon während dieser Tage zum Ausdruck gebracht wurde, möchte ich nochmals beitragen: neben dem Blick auf das Leid, den Tod der Opfer in ihrer Würde in gleicher Weise der respektvolle und klare Blick auf die Verantwortung der Täter. Durch unsere "Wahrnehmung" von "Verantwortung" könnte auch auf dieser Ebene noch mehr in Bewegung kommen.

    Denn, weltweit neigen Täter dazu, Verantwortung abzustreiten oder sich selbst als Opfer hinzustellen.

    I agree wholeheartedly. The experience of the seminar was healing. Thank you for your commitment.

    In addition to all that was expressed during these days, I would contribute this: Besides offering our respect and remorse for the suffering and dignity of the victims, we clearly and respectfully perceived the responsibility of the perpetrator. Thanks to our "perception" of "responsibility," we moved towards a deeper level of healing.

    Because throughout the world, perpetrators tend to shrug off responsibility or present themselves as victims.

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  7. I have nothing but the deepest respect for the work done here! Thank you!

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  8. When the representative for Motl was shot into a pit, suddenly, I saw my father's face in my mental eye and heard him say, 'I am accountable. I did oversee the executions at the pit.' This is something the real person had always denied vividly. Some weight, some burden shifted from my shoulders back to his where it belonged.

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  9. Dear Dan
    I remain fascinated at the beautiful work you manage to bring out in the group. Even while reading the narrative of the event I was able to sense the openess of the souls of those present as others joined in bringing a wider spectrum to your perception from which comes the solution. Your ability to resonate with the created energetic field is something to be appreciated by those you assist towards thier own healing.
    May God Bless you.
    Josephine

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  10. Dear Dan and all your participants,
    Thank you for your courage and love to stand for and in for the rest of us around the world. May the healing love and understanding ripple over our consciousness.

    I can't wait to attend the Friday Constellation Introduction workshop and to meet you Dan.

    Judy Faust
    What's Your Story?
    connecting family stories to history and the arts
    www.connectyourstories.com

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