Lilo was a child during the Holocaust. Now that the older generation of Holocaust survivors, such as her parents, have mostly passed on, she and others like her are the "last survivors of the Holocaust" -- the final witnesses to the horrors that Hitler perpetrated on the Jewish people. After Lilo attended a workshop given by Hana Greenfield, noted author, lecturer, and Holocaust child survivor, where she spoke about the importance of child survivors sharing their experiences of the Holocaust, Lilo began compiling her history and experiences. She started speaking to schools and groups, and received more and more requests to share her story, presented here in a special volume illustrated by Lilo herself. Through narrative, poems and illustrations, this book shares the voice of a childhood lived in the shadow of the ultimate darkness.
Lilo L. Cohn-Sharon, called Lillian by some of her American classmates and co-workers, was born Liselotte Klopstock in Berlin Germany. Her parents came from families who trace their roots in Berlin and Mannheim, Germany, as far back as 1773. Lilo is on the Board of Directors of The Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center in Skokie, Illinois. She speaks to groups about the Holocaust and is a firm believer that only through education, activitism and awareness can we keep the Holocaust from happening again. A graduate with honors from National Louis University, and an alumni of the Art Institute of Chicago, Lilo is an accomplished artist in both commercial and fine art. Her paintings are in many private collections and in museums. All the illustrations in this book have also been done by Lilo.