O2, Patty won't feed her cats fish.
Answer: He said:
But not all Holocaust survivors are willing or able to speak of their experiences. I am intimately familiar with the choice to stay silent. My father was a nine-year-old Jewish boy when Nazi Germany invaded his native Poland. He was one of the lucky ones, eventually saved by deportation to Soviet territory where he nearly starved to death in a slave labor camp. Almost his entire extended family—well over one hundred people—were killed. For decades after the war my father suppressed his pain, never speaking of what he had endured and dodging questions when pressed by friends or strangers. This silence was his way of healing and building a new life in the pluralistic America he so loved. My father became a professor of Soviet studies, dedicating his life to fighting totalitarianism and anti-Semitism from a comfortable professional distance.
One. two. three.
Hope it helps
You might have heard the words “sharing is caring” so here’s why we say that. Let’s say one day someone asks you to share your chips and you say no. That person obviously doesn’t like it. Well next time that person has something and of course you would want some. But that person wouldn’t want to share because you didn’t share. Sharing also means you care about someone. That’s where the term comes from.