Terri Masson was born in Poland in 1937 and survived the Warsaw Ghetto. After the war she and her parents went to France, and then to Canada. She earned a BA in philosophy from York University and a JD from Golden Gate University. Her many careers included journalist, producer, lawyer, and consultant.
“This slim volume is a memorial to what was lost in the Holocaust. … Born Klara Alter, Thérèse (Terri) Masson composed her own Kaddish, at once prayer of mourning for her family and her testimony as a survivor. … Her daughter has edited it and filled in numerous missing pieces… all of which enhance the story of a remarkable woman who survived a genocide and, late in life, summoned the courage to recount everything she had faced.” — Gila Wertheimer, Jewish Book Council “Within the vast, ever-increasing Holocaust literature, Thérèse C. Masson’s childhood memoir stands out. My Kaddish is a compelling, intriguing testimony. … [It] is a ‘lighthouse’ that provides guidance for Holocaust research, education, and remembrance. … My Kaddish depicts the landscapes of [Thérèse’s] early childhood, transforming them into memorial sites. Visual images and sensory triggers link the past and present… What finally emerges is a striking self-analysis which not only illustrates how this childhood memoir has been constructed but also reveals the psychological burdens and damage of a child survivor. My Kaddish is an important and challenging autobiographical account of the trauma, the wounds, Thérèse experienced as a child during the Holocaust—wounds which never healed and that shaped her postwar life.” — Emeritus Professor Dr. Konrad Kwiet, Sydney Jewish Museum, from the preface