:30:01
And you can go to school there,
and later on to the university.
:30:04
And if you like it, and want to,
you can become an American citizen.
:30:08
You mean, go right away?
:30:10
Perhaps. In the next week or two.
:30:12
Meanwhile, I may be able
to get you out of camp.
:30:15
I'll speak to the general tonight.
:30:19
-What's the matter?
-Nothing.
:30:22
You do want to go, don't you?
:30:24
Yes, but I mean...
:30:27
I must think about it a little.
:30:30
-What is there to think about?
-I don't know.
:30:33
But it's so important,
and I need a little time.
:30:37
You know, to think.
:30:41
Take all the time you wish.
:30:45
-Kitty?
-Yes?
:30:48
-Don't be mad at me.
-Of course not.
:30:54
It's getting late. You
better finish your steak.
:31:06
Fine thing, what you want to do for Karen.
:31:10
She told you?
:31:12
She is worried about her father.
:31:16
I didn't know that her father was alive.
:31:18
When Karen was six,
he smuggled her out of Germany to Denmark.
:31:22
After the war she went
back to find her parents.
:31:26
The Jewish Agency had records of the dead.
:31:28
She found her mother on the Dachau list...
:31:30
...together with her two younger brothers.
:31:33
About the father there was nothing,
so naturally she hopes he is still alive.
:31:36
Maybe in Palestine.
:31:38
As a matter of fact, there
is such a possibility.
:31:40
He was a very important scientist.
The Nazis could have spared his life...
:31:44
...in order to use his brain.
But of course, who knows?
:31:49
It's curious
that she didn't mention her father to me.
:31:52
You must understand something
about these children.
:31:55
Their past is scarred.
They're ashamed of it.
:31:58
To have a parent who has been persecuted,
or killed in a concentration camp...