The Secret Holocaust Diaries
Download The Secret Holocaust Diaries full books in PDF, epub, and Kindle. Read online free The Secret Holocaust Diaries ebook anywhere anytime directly on your device. Fast Download speed and no annoying ads. We cannot guarantee that every ebooks is available!
Author | : |
Publisher | : Tyndale House Publishers, Inc. |
Total Pages | : 325 |
Release | : 2011-03-21 |
Genre | : Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | : 1414341776 |
Nonna Bannister carried a secret almost to her Tennessee grave: the diaries she had kept as a young girl experiencing the horrors of the Holocaust. This book reveals that story. Nonna’s childhood writings, revisited in her late adulthood, tell the remarkable tale of how a Russian girl from a family that had known wealth and privilege, then exposed to German labor camps, learned the value of human life and the importance of forgiveness. This story of loss, of love, and of forgiveness is one you will not forget.
Author | : Nonna Bannister |
Publisher | : Tyndale House Pub |
Total Pages | : 299 |
Release | : 2010-03 |
Genre | : Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | : 9781414325477 |
The author documents her experiences during World War II through a secret diary she kept during her time in a concentration camp and the years following the war.
Author | : Laurel Holliday |
Publisher | : Simon and Schuster |
Total Pages | : 444 |
Release | : 2014-02-04 |
Genre | : Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | : 1439121974 |
Children in the Holocaust and World War II is an extraordinary, unprecedented anthology of diaries written by children all across Nazi-occupied Europe and in England. Twenty-three young people, ages ten through eighteen, recount in vivid detail the horrors they lived through. As powerful as The Diary of Anne Frank and Zlata's Diary, children's experiences are written with an unguarded eloquence that belies their years. Some of the diarists include: a Hungarian girl, selected by Mengele to be put in a line of prisoners who were tortured and murdered; a Danish Christian boy executed by the Nazis for his partisan work; and a twelve-year-old Dutch boy who lived through the Blitzkrieg in Rotterdam. And many others. These heartbreaking stories paint a harrowing picture of a genocide that will never be forgotten, and a war that shaped many generations to follow. All of their voices and visions ennoble us all.
Author | : Alexandra Zapruder |
Publisher | : Yale University Press |
Total Pages | : 536 |
Release | : 2015-08-25 |
Genre | : Literary Collections |
ISBN | : 0300210833 |
Winner of the National Jewish Book Award: viewing the Holocaust through the eyes of youth “Zapruder . . . has done a great service to history and the future. Her book deserves to become a standard in Holocaust studies classes. . . . These writings will certainly impress themselves on the memories of all readers.”—Publishers Weekly “These extraordinary diaries will resonate in the reader’s broken heart for many days and many nights.”—Elie Wiesel This stirring collection of diaries written by young people, aged twelve to twenty-two years, during the Holocaust has been fully revised and updated. Some of the writers were refugees, others were in hiding or passing as non-Jews, some were imprisoned in ghettos, and nearly all perished before liberation. This seminal National Jewish Book Award winner preserves the impressions, emotions, and eyewitness reportage of young people whose accounts of daily events and often unexpected thoughts, ideas, and feelings serve to deepen and complicate our understanding of life during the Holocaust. The second paperback edition includes a new preface by Alexandra Zapruder examining the book’s history and impact. Simultaneously, a multimedia edition incorporates a wealth of new content in a variety of media, including photographs of the writers and their families, images of the original diaries, artwork made by the writers, historical documents, glossary terms, maps, survivor testimony (some available for the first time), and video of the author teaching key passages. In addition, an in-depth, interdisciplinary curriculum in history, literature, and writing developed by the author and a team of teachers, working in cooperation with the educational organization Facing History and Ourselves, is now available to support use of the book in middle- and high-school classrooms.
Author | : Avraham Krakowski |
Publisher | : Cis Pub |
Total Pages | : 317 |
Release | : 1994 |
Genre | : Hasidism |
ISBN | : 9781560622680 |
Author | : Arnold Douwes |
Publisher | : Indiana University Press |
Total Pages | : 358 |
Release | : 2019-08-29 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 0253044200 |
A rare diary by the leader of an underground rescue network during the Holocaust that’s “a crucial source for the study of the Dutch resistance” (Ido de Haan, coeditor of Securing Europe After Napoleon). In the Netherlands, the myth that resistance to Nazi occupation was high among all sectors of the population has retained a strong hold, and yet many Dutch Jews fell victim to deportation and annihilation in the camps of Eastern Europe. How could a country that prided itself on its tolerance, adherence to legal norms, and democratic government have been the site of such an enormous tragedy? Even while Nazi arrests of Jews were taking place, Arnold Douwes, a gardener and restless adventurer, headed a clandestine network of resistance and rescue. Douwes had spent time in the United States and France and was arrested several times by the police after his return to the Netherlands in 1940. Keenly aware that he was doing something important, he started a diary in the summer of 1943. He hid some thirty-five small notebooks in jam jars at safe houses in the vicinity of his base in Nieuwlande (Drenthe). After the war, he dug the notebooks up and transcribed them, adding several postwar sections with scrupulous notations. Bob Moore has translated Douwes’s diary into English for the first time, and he and coeditor Johannes Houwink ten Cate have added a historical and contextual introduction, annotations, and a glossary for readers who may not be familiar with Dutch technical terms or places. Organized chronologically, and remaining largely as Douwes originally wrote it, the diary sheds light on the successes—and failures—of this important Dutch rescue network.
Author | : Laurel Holliday |
Publisher | : Piatkus Books |
Total Pages | : 409 |
Release | : 1996 |
Genre | : Children |
ISBN | : 9780749916312 |
To mark the 50th anniversary of the end of the Second World War, here is an extraordinary anthology of diaries written by children in Nazi-occupied Europe. With a scope that encompasses the entire war, the breadth of Europe, the London Blitz and the Warsaw ghetto, the diaries are as powerful as The Diary of Anne Frank .The children, who are from all over Europe, write in spare, searing prose of life in ghettos and concentration camps, of bombings, strafings and Blitzkriegs, of dreams and death, fear and courage, tragedy and transcendence. Their voices and their vision will move us all.
Author | : Morris Breitbart |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 64 |
Release | : 2007 |
Genre | : Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | : |
Contains the Polish original and an English translation of several diary entries written in 1943-44 by Morris Breitbart (born in 1921 in Szczerców), while he was in hiding after escaping from a transport train on the way to Treblinka. He was hidden, and his life was thus saved, by a Polish peasant woman, Genia Bejenkow. The entries provide hardly any historical information, but are striking laments of a homeless orphan, who asks where was humanity and where was justice when the Nazis killed innocent Jews, including members of his family, and the world was indifferent.
Author | : Jacob Boas |
Publisher | : Macmillan |
Total Pages | : 212 |
Release | : 2009-03-17 |
Genre | : Juvenile Nonfiction |
ISBN | : 9780312535674 |
Five diares of teenages who died in the Holocaust.
Author | : Alan Rosen |
Publisher | : Indiana University Press |
Total Pages | : 272 |
Release | : 2019-02-28 |
Genre | : Religion |
ISBN | : 0253038286 |
“The most comprehensive to date treatment of these precious artifacts of the Holocaust’s Jewish efforts to maintain religious observations and identity.” —Choice Calendars map time, shaping and delineating our experience of it. While the challenges to tracking Jewish conceptions of time during the Holocaust were substantial, Alan Rosen reveals that many took great risks to mark time within that vast upheaval. Rosen inventories and organizes Jewish calendars according to the wartime settings in which they were produced—from Jewish communities to ghettos and concentration camps. The calendars he considers reorient views of Jewish circumstances during the war and show how Jews were committed to fashioning traditional guides to daily life, even in the most extreme conditions. In a separate chapter, moreover, he elucidates how Holocaust-era diaries sometimes served as surrogate Jewish calendars. All in all, Rosen presents a revised idea of time, continuity, the sacred and the mundane, the ordinary and the extraordinary even when death and destruction were the order of the day. Rosen’s focus on the Jewish calendar—the ultimate symbol of continuity, as weekday follows weekday and Sabbath follows Sabbath—sheds new light on how Jews maintained connections to their way of conceiving time even within the cauldron of the Holocaust. “Rosen demonstrates the relationship between time and meaning, between meaning and holiness, between holy days and the divine presence―all of which came under assault in the Nazis’ effort to kill Jewish souls before destroying Jewish bodies.” —David Patterson, author of Along the Edge of Annihilation: The Collapse and Recovery of Life in the Holocaust Diary