To Tell at Last: Survival Under False Identity, 1941-45University of Illinois Press, 1993 - 178 Seiten "Searing. . . . With an even hand and understated prose, Ms. Rosenberg, now a New York City psychotherapist, bravely depicts Nazi carnage in chilling detail." -- Susan Shapiro, New York Times Book Review "[A] harrowing account of intrigue and danger with all the elements of a war movie adventure." -- Miriam Rinn, The Forward This memoir of how a Jewish woman survived Nazi Germany by passing as an Aryan was selected as the best book on Holocaust and Jewish Resistance Literature by the Israeli committee of the Egit Grants. |
Inhalt
How War Came to Us | 9 |
The New Order | 17 |
Present and Past | 26 |
Ghetto 1 | 32 |
Ghetto 2 | 39 |
Crushing the Ghetto | 47 |
The Ghetto End and Escape | 61 |
Lwow | 80 |
Warsaw | 89 |
Back to Lwow | 100 |
Warsaw Again | 114 |
Heidelberg | 138 |
Aftermath | 157 |
Epilogue | 169 |
Index | 172 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Action Anthony Aryan asked baby became began Belzec Binder Blanca brother camps Cesia child couple crowd death door Edward escape face factory fear felt Frania friends Gentile German Gestapo girl Gorlice happened head heard Heidelberg Hertzstein hope husband Jewish police Jews Judenrat kitchen knew Kolomyja Kreish labor camps landlady later learned leave Leideritz Leszek living Lodzia looked Lwów Lydia Maria Mati Mati's Menek morning mother moved Nazis never night Nowy Sącz Nunek Poland Poles Polish pulled registered Romek saved seemed shot smiled someone soon Soviet stairs station stay stood story streets Suddenly survived tears tell There's thought tion told Tomaszow Mazowiecki took town train tram tried turned Ukrainian Ukrainian guards Volksdeutsche walked wanted Warsaw Warsaw uprising week wife Wolf woman Yiddish young zlotys Zygmund
Verweise auf dieses Buch
Between Dignity and Despair: Jewish Life in Nazi Germany Marion A. Kaplan Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 1999 |