Inge Auerbacher, 88, is the star of a new interactive VR experience called "Tell Me, Inge" in which she recounts her horrific experiences as a small Jewish child in a Nazi concentration camp and what it took for her to not give up.
"I've been involved in many (Holocaust education) projects but I find this one is made for today," Auerbacher, who traveled from her home in New York for the launch in Berlin on June 6, told AFP.
"I wanted it to be able to be used for all ages, and particularly young people. With a book, you have to create your own images in your head but with this technology, you see it with your own eyes."
Through artificial intelligence, users of the VR headset can have a "conversation" with Auerbacher, asking about her encounters with heartbreaking loss and occasional heroism.
The project is a collaboration between Los Angeles-based company StoryFile, the World Jewish Congress and Facebook-owner Meta, which billed it as the first AI and metaverse Holocaust education experience in Germany.
Auerbacher, a trained chemist, sat for two days of interviews, answering around 60 questions in fluent German and English to create a database of video files.
When a user asks a question based on prompts on the screen, the system spools to that section of the interview using key words and Inge "answers," creating the effect of an immersive, one-on-one exchange.
On screen, Auerbacher wears a butterfly scarf and brooch - for her, a symbol of the 1.5 million children killed by the Nazis. In the backdrop, 3-D animated graphics and archival footage illustrate her story.
Asked how it was seeing her own image via the headset, the sprightly Auerbacher said with a laugh, "It was great, I look so young!"
StoryFile co-founder Stephen Smith, who has worked in Holocaust education for three decades, said the technology allows users to "talk to history through the people who went through it."
"I spent much of my life with Holocaust survivors and in spite of all of the hate that they experienced, they have made amazing contributions to society," he told AFP.
"There's a great deal to take from the human spirit, from resilience and tenacity. So this project is giving young people the opportunity to open their eyes very early."
Meta has invested heavily in VR headgear for a range of purposes from gaming to conferencing and education.
Julia Reuss, Meta's director of public policy for central Europe, declined to discuss its financial contribution to the project but said the company hoped to keep expanding it with other survivors.
"We've long had a focus on fighting anti-Semitism in our team here in Germany and we're happy we found the right partner to help us address Holocaust remembrance culture and education using VR," she told AFP.
In addition to the program for headsets, smartphone and computer versions are available. Reuss said museums and schools would be ideal settings to use them.
Now traveling the globe as a book author and educator, Auerbacher told the German parliament last year on International Holocaust Remembrance Day that it was essential to fight the spreading "cancer" of hatred.
Auerbacher said she wanted the new VR and AI technology to be one more weapon in the war against disinformation and hate speech.
"When you're dead, you're gone - not everyone believes in heaven. And it's important to me that this history does not die," Auerbacher said.
"When I'm gone, perhaps someone will remember me. This technology is there and we should use it."
BERLIN - Inge Auerbacher fears for a future when Holocaust survivors like her can no longer bear witness. But advances in virtual reality (VR) and AI give her hope their stories will live on.
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