Julia
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:17:01
- How is your writing?
- Oh, I'm still at the publishing house.

:17:04
I wish I could write full-time.
:17:07
- Do you have a beau?
- No. Do you?

:17:11
Well, I think maybe I found somebody.
:17:13
- And you?
- I did, but it didn't work out.

:17:16
- What are you reading now?
- Darwin, Engels...

:17:19
Hegel, Einstein.
:17:23
- Do you understand Einstein?
- Sure.

:17:43
- Will you come home next summer?
- No, I'm going to Vienna.

:17:48
I'll finish my medical studies there...
:17:50
and then I'll apply to study
with Professor Freud.

:17:53
Can you do that?
I mean, I know you can do that...

:17:55
- butJesus.
- I think so. There's a chance.

:17:58
I think he will accept me.
Lilly, you have to come to Vienna.

:18:01
Then you'll know what to write about.
:18:03
People are coming alive there... working
people who've never had a chance before.

:18:07
They've built their own
part of the city in Floridsdorf.

:18:10
They've got their own orchestra.
The newspaper's the best in Vienna.

:18:14
Lilly, finally there's
some real hope in the world.

:18:18
Do you understand?
:18:21
Yes, of course.
:18:26
But I didn't understand.
:18:28
Not fully. Who of us did?
:18:32
She wrote me from time to time. She went on
to study medicine at the university in Vienna.

:18:38
And as the years went on,
she wrote angrily of the threat of fascism...

:18:43
and of the Nazis, of Mussolini
and Adolf Hitler...

:18:47
and of the holocaust
that was on the way.

:18:51
She couldn't understand why the world
refused to see what was coming.


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