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	<title>Comments on: Review &#8211; Sarah&#8217;s Key</title>
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	<description>the windshield was broken but I love the fresh air</description>
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		<title>By: Leah</title>
		<link>http://www.randomthinking.info/wordpress/2008/10/24/review-sarahs-key/comment-page-1/#comment-28256</link>
		<dc:creator>Leah</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 25 Oct 2008 02:30:17 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>I will have to get this book! When I was a senior in high school we had to read a book about the holocaust, which lead to me reading another book called &quot;Anya&quot; which I ended up reading every 3 or 4 years during my adulthood until I lost it during my last move. Anya was the beginning of my fascination with holocaust books. I think it was the idea that people could SURVIVE these horrible things. The the human spirit could be resilient. I couldn&#039;t understand how there could be such sick people in the world, and know that they&#039;re still out there today. I read about the doctors, and the experiments, it was all just unbelievable to me.  When my boys were 10 or so, we watched a movie called &quot;The Devil&#039;s Arithmetic&quot;. A Billy Graham production about a family born from Holocause survivors, and how the kids of today can&#039;t connect, and how it&#039;s being forgotten. If you haven&#039;t seen it, it&#039;s a great movie for tweens and young adults. Really...our entire extended family watched it together and when the movie ended, the room was silent for several minutes as well all pondered what we&#039;d just watched.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I will have to get this book! When I was a senior in high school we had to read a book about the holocaust, which lead to me reading another book called &#8220;Anya&#8221; which I ended up reading every 3 or 4 years during my adulthood until I lost it during my last move. Anya was the beginning of my fascination with holocaust books. I think it was the idea that people could SURVIVE these horrible things. The the human spirit could be resilient. I couldn&#8217;t understand how there could be such sick people in the world, and know that they&#8217;re still out there today. I read about the doctors, and the experiments, it was all just unbelievable to me.  When my boys were 10 or so, we watched a movie called &#8220;The Devil&#8217;s Arithmetic&#8221;. A Billy Graham production about a family born from Holocause survivors, and how the kids of today can&#8217;t connect, and how it&#8217;s being forgotten. If you haven&#8217;t seen it, it&#8217;s a great movie for tweens and young adults. Really&#8230;our entire extended family watched it together and when the movie ended, the room was silent for several minutes as well all pondered what we&#8217;d just watched.</p>
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