DiscoverKeys: A Troubled InheritanceS1E6 UKRAINE’S INCONVENIENT HISTORY
S1E6 UKRAINE’S INCONVENIENT HISTORY

S1E6 UKRAINE’S INCONVENIENT HISTORY

Update: 2023-10-11
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Description

Nationalism comes under the spotlight in Episode Six: Israel Gold, Mike Joseph’s grandfather, adds a four-kilo dictionary to his soldier’s kit bag in November 1917. We discover why. Then, without knowing it, Israel Gold becomes Ukrainian, an identity which will through time reveal the strengths of multiculturalism and the perils of ethnic nationalism.




In this epic journey, Mike sets out to uncover his Holocaust inheritance, but is led relentlessly to discovering his Nakba
inheritance. It turns out that the two different catastrophes are more connected than he thought possible. In 2023, can both stories be heard and understood? 


 


With unique personal testimony, recordings, letters and memories by those who survived and those who did not, this challenging
audio series is devised, dramatised and narrated by broadcaster Mike Joseph. 



PLACE NAMES 


When the place names in Keys get confusing, these
notes will help.




Mike’s grandparents came from Galicia, a part of eastern Europe on no modern map. Today some of Galicia is southeast Poland,
another part is western Ukraine. Galicia no longer exists.

In the last century, many of Galicia’s Jews, Ukrainians and Poles also ceased to exist, violently, as their province was repeatedly ruptured by the front lines of two World Wars, genocide and ethnic cleansing.

Before 1918, Galicia was the Austro-Hungarian Empire’s most eastern province.
Its capital was Lemberg (German) = Lwów (Polish) = Lviv (Ukrainian). 


Three names, but one city.

Further south, Mike’s grandfather grew up in Stanislau (German); left Stanislaviv (Ukrainian) in 1918 for a better life in Germany; deported back to Stanisławów (Polish) in 1938, which became Stanislaviv (Ukrainian) in 1939; killed in Stanislau (German) in 1941.

Before Mike first visited that city in 1999, the Soviet Union renamed it Ivano-Frankovsk (Russian). Today the place where he found his grandfather’s surviving colleagues and allies is called Ivano-Frankivsk (Ukrainian). 


Five names, but one city.


Fatima Abu Salem grew up in the thriving Palestinian village of Burayr, at crossroads leading to Gaza, Hebron and Beersheba. Today a few ruins of Burayr are surrounded by the fields of Kibbutz Bro’r Hayyil.


Two names, but one place.


Place names matter. How we name places reveals our own histories, identities and yearnings.

CREDITS for this episode


Testimony


Testimony and commentary by Mike Joseph, Asha
Phillips


 


Interpreters and Translators


Dina Brandt           


Alex Dunai


Markus Hartmann   


Burkhardt Kolbmuller


Svitlana Kovalyk


Itamar Shapira


Nadia Slobodyan


Hannah Kleinfeld


Atef Alshaer


 


Images & music


Mike Joseph


Sami Abu Salem


Micha Wink 


Lilli Gold, © 1998 USC Shoah Foundation. From the archive
of USC Shoah Foundation – The Institute for Visual History and Education  http://sfi.usc.edu/


 


PRODUCTION


Mike Joseph                    Producer


Zac Ware                         Sound Editor


Micha Wink                      Keys Theme & Variations
on a Bach Prelude in B minor 


Pamela Koehne-Drube      Audience and Web Advisor


 


PRESENTERS


Mike Joseph


Asha Phillips


 


CAST in programme order


Terry Dimmick as car park attendant


George May as Israel Gold

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S1E6 UKRAINE’S INCONVENIENT HISTORY

S1E6 UKRAINE’S INCONVENIENT HISTORY

Mike Joseph