“Comme Toi” paints a tender snapshot of a little girl named Sarah: her velvet dress, her love of Schumann and Mozart, her school friends, and her innocent dreams of growing up and marrying one day. Jean-Jacques Goldman invites us to leaf through an old, slightly blurred photograph where late-afternoon sunlight bathes a scene of pure childhood happiness. The refrain « Comme toi » (“Like you”) keeps reminding us that Sarah’s joys and hopes mirror those of any child today.
Then the song quietly lowers the veil on a heartbreaking truth. Sarah was Jewish, living in Europe during World War II, and “other people decided differently” for her future. Her life was cut short simply because she was born in another place and time. Goldman’s gentle melody contrasts with this cruel reality, urging listeners to feel the fragile line between safety and tragedy. Comme Toi is ultimately a moving call to empathy and remembrance, asking us never to forget the children whose stories ended too soon—and to cherish the ones who, like you, are free to keep dreaming.