Louis Lowy (1920–1991), an international social worker and gerontologist,
rarely spoke publicly about the Holocaust. During the last months of
his life, however, he recorded an oral narrative that explores his activities
during the Holocaust as the formative experiences of his career.
Whether caring for youth in concentration camps, leading an escape
from a death march, or forming the self-government of a Jewish displaced
persons center, Lowy was guided by principles that would later inform his
professional identity as a social worker, including the values of human
worth and self-determination, the interdependence of generations, and
the need for social participation and lifelong learning.
Drawing on Lowy’s oral narrative and accounts from three other
Holocaust survivors who witnessed his work in the Terezín ghetto and the
Deggendorf Displaced Persons Center, Gardella offers a rich portrait of
Lowy’s personal and professional legacy. In chronicling his life, Gardella
also uncovers a larger story about Jewish history and the meaning of the
Holocaust in the development of the social work profession.