Dialogue in the Darkness explores the meeting of faith, philosophy, and human resilience under the extremity of the Holocaust. Through the imagined conversations of a Jewish rabbi, an Orthodox priest, and a young boy in Auschwitz-Birkenau, the book examines how meaning persists even in the face of systematic evil.
Drawing on theology, Jewish and Christian mysticism, and existential philosophy-from Dostoevsky to Florensky, Frankl to Camus-this work confronts ultimate questions of suffering, divine presence, moral responsibility, and the endurance of consciousness.
This is more than historical reflection: it is a meditation on the human capacity for love, understanding, and ethical action when all external structures collapse. Ideal for students of theology, philosophy, Holocaust studies, and readers seeking profound spiritual insight.
Witness the dialogue that transforms darkness into insight, despair into reflection, and survival into a testament to the persistence of meaning.
Dr. Cornelis van Houte