Bert Reiner: Shanghai Survivor & Cabbage Patch Doll Engineer
Bert Reiner: Shanghai Survivor & Cabbage Patch Doll Engineer
Bert Reiner: Shanghai Survivor & Cabbage Patch Doll Engineer

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Harbor from the Holocaust

Bert Reiner: Shanghai Survivor & Cabbage Patch Doll Engineer

Bert Reiner: Shanghai Survivor & Cabbage Patch Doll Engineer

Bert Reiner’s middle-class family was forced to abandon a comfortable life in Germany for the unknown world of Shanghai, China. Bert saw poverty and deprivation, but also made friends, learned Chinese, and played games. Coming to America after WWII’s end, when Shanghai emptied of its Jewish refugees, Bert

Vibes:

Behind the Music

Behind the Music

Reflections on creating the textured musical score for “Harbor from the Holocaust” by Composer Chad Cannon, Violinist Niv Ashkenazi and Cantor Avram Mlotek. The music includes many personal and cultural influences, and features traditional Chinese guzheng played by Bei Bei Monter, and world renowned Cellist Yo-Yo Ma playing passages throughout

"Poéme for Cello and Orchestra"

"Poéme for Cello and Orchestra"

Composed by Hiao-Tsiun Ma and played by his son, Yo-Yo Ma. This piece was written by the elder Ma, who was a violinist and teacher. He wrote it about Shanghai, a city across the bay from the town he grew up in (Ningbo) and which he’d visited many times.

An Accidental Haven - Shanghai Timeline

An Accidental Haven - Shanghai Timeline

Documentary Advisors Tina Johnson and Michele Heryford share brief historical highlights of Shanghai and its relationship with Jewish emigrés through many centuries, making it a unique safe harbor — and one of the only places in the world for Jews escaping Nazi persecution during WWII. The preserved Jewish ghetto is

"Rose, Rose, I Love You"

"Rose, Rose, I Love You"

"Méiguì méiguì wǒ ài nǐ" is a song in Mandarin composed by Chen Gexin, and first recorded by Yao Lee, that became very popular in the1940s in Shanghai among the Jewish refugees there. It was also known as “Shanghai Rose” and “China Rose.” In 1951, an English-language version

Professor Emeritus Irene Eber

Professor Emeritus Irene Eber

Professor Emeritus Irene Eber of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem was an early advisor to the documentary. Author of "Wartime Shanghai and the Jewish Refugees from Central Europe: Survival, Co-Existence, and Identity in a Multi-Ethnic City," Eber’s own story is that of a Jewish refugee from Nazi

Bert Reiner: Shanghai Survivor & Cabbage Patch Doll Engineer

Bert Reiner: Shanghai Survivor & Cabbage Patch Doll Engineer

Bert Reiner’s middle-class family was forced to abandon a comfortable life in Germany for the unknown world of Shanghai, China. Bert saw poverty and deprivation, but also made friends, learned Chinese, and played games. Coming to America after WWII’s end, when Shanghai emptied of its Jewish refugees, Bert

Songs For Her Shanghailander Grandmother

Songs For Her Shanghailander Grandmother

Heather Klein was moved to create and sing a one-woman operatic program to honor her grandmother Rosa Ginsberg who escaped Nazi persecution, lived a challenging life in Shanghai, and was detained at Angel Island upon coming to America. Rosa was finally able to settle in New York. Backed by accompanist

Mike Medavoy: Shanghailander & Hollywood Producer

Mike Medavoy: Shanghailander & Hollywood Producer

Mike Medavoy’s family was already settled in Shanghai among the Jewish emigrés who had escaped pogroms in Russia during the mid-1900s. This group offered assistance to the waves of refugees fleeing the Nazis during WWII. His boyhood in Shanghai inspired Medavoy — who eventually became a successful and well-known