Boarding the Train for a Trip into the Past

Newspaper Article
Sarah Federman
Sarah Federman
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Buzz McClain
Buzz McClain
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Boarding the Train for a Trip into the Past
Written: About S-CAR
Author: Buzz McClain
Published Date: January 31, 2017
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On a summer Sunday in 2007, Sarah Federman, PhD Conflict Analysis and Resolution ’16, visited the Mémorial de la Shoah, the Holocaust museum and memorial in Paris. As she passed through the vast list of names of French deportees etched into courtyard walls, she gasped when she spotted her own name.

“I ran my fingers across the engraved letters,” she says. “The gravity of the thought collapsed time. I realized it would have been me; it would have been my family.”

The idea that “the France I loved would have crammed me into a deportation train headed toward a death camp” set Federman on a journey to investigate the role corporations play in large-scale conflicts—significantly France’s national train system, SNCF. Now she’s turning her PhD dissertation at the School for Conflict Analysis and Resolution into a book, and it’s only fitting that she will be writing it on a train.

Federman is among the group of 24 writers selected for the Amtrak Residency program and as such will have a free pass and a workspace on Amtrak trains for a year.

More than 600 applicants competed for the 24 fellowships. Among Federman’s 2016 cohorts are a Washington Post columnist, a New York City playwright, a film director, a novelist, and several poets.

Federman’s dissertation focuses on the involvement SNCF in the deportation of Jews to concentration camps during World War II. She asks if the modern SNCF has owned up to its responsibility and wonders why so many other companies have been exonerated.

Federman, originally from Westchester, New York, and a summa cum laude graduate of the University of Pennsylvania, says her mother’s ancestry on both sides goes back to the Mayflower, but her paternal grandfather escaped from Poland before Hitler rose to power.

For her residency, she’s looking forward to traveling along the Oregon Trail, from Chicago to San Francisco, starting this spring.

“The grant gives me time to work on the book, but it also lets me really put myself inside trains to see what the mystique is all about.”

 

**This article was reprinted in Mason Spirit- A George Mason University Magazine on February 7th 2017.  See this version of the article here.

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