Difference between revisions of "Yehuda Nir / Juliusz Gruenfeld (M / Poland, 1930-2014), Holocaust survivor"

From 4 Enoch: : The Online Encyclopedia of Second Temple Judaism, and Christian and Islamic Origins
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(4 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
[[File:1989 Nir.jpg|thumb|250px]]
[[File:1989 Nir.jpg|thumb|250px]]


'''Yehuda Nir''' / Juliusz Gruenfeld (M / Poland, 1930-2014)  
'''Yehuda Nir / Juliusz Gruenfeld''' (M / Poland, 1930-2014), Holocaust survivor.


* <Hidden Children>  
* KEYWORDS : <Hidden Children>  
* <[[Memoirs]]>
* MEMOIRS : ''The Lost Childhood'' (1989)


== Biography ==
== Biography ==
Line 16: Line 16:
"The story of six extraordinary years in the life of a Polish Jewish boy who, along with his mother and sister, survived World War II through cunning, deceit, and guile ... This compelling memoir takes readers through the eyes of a child surviving World War II in Nazi-occupied Poland. As a nine-year-old, the author witnessed his father being herded into a truck—never to be seen again. He, his mother, and sister fled to Warsaw to live in disguise as Catholics under the noses of the Nazi SS, constantly fearful of discovery and persecution. A sobering reminder of the personal toll of the Holocaust on Jews during World War II, this book is a harrowing portrait of one child's loss of innocence. This edition contains previously unpublished content from the original text."--Publisher description.
"The story of six extraordinary years in the life of a Polish Jewish boy who, along with his mother and sister, survived World War II through cunning, deceit, and guile ... This compelling memoir takes readers through the eyes of a child surviving World War II in Nazi-occupied Poland. As a nine-year-old, the author witnessed his father being herded into a truck—never to be seen again. He, his mother, and sister fled to Warsaw to live in disguise as Catholics under the noses of the Nazi SS, constantly fearful of discovery and persecution. A sobering reminder of the personal toll of the Holocaust on Jews during World War II, this book is a harrowing portrait of one child's loss of innocence. This edition contains previously unpublished content from the original text."--Publisher description.


==External links==


[[Category:Holocaust Children's Biographies (subject)|1929 Schloss]]
[[Category:Holocaust Children, 1930 (subject)|1930 Nir]]
[[Category:Holocaust Children's Memoirs (subject)|1929 Schloss]]
[[Category:Holocaust Children, Poland (subject)|1930 Nir]]


[[Category:Hidden Children (subject)|1929 Schloss]]
[[Category:Holocaust Children's Memoirs (subject)|1930 Nir]]
 
[[Category:Hidden Children (subject)|1930 Nir]]

Latest revision as of 05:25, 30 September 2020

1989 Nir.jpg

Yehuda Nir / Juliusz Gruenfeld (M / Poland, 1930-2014), Holocaust survivor.

  • KEYWORDS : <Hidden Children>
  • MEMOIRS : The Lost Childhood (1989)

Biography

Yehuda Nir (1930-2014) was born Juliusz Gruenfeld in Lwów, Poland. Nir and his family posed as Roman Catholics and learned Latin to escape Nazi persecution in Poland during World War II. Nir's ordeal led him to a career as a psychiatrist, specializing in the treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder and severely ill children. He immigrated to the United States in 1959.

Book : The Lost Childhood (1989)

  • The Lost Childhood (San Diego : Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1989)

"The story of six extraordinary years in the life of a Polish Jewish boy who, along with his mother and sister, survived World War II through cunning, deceit, and guile ... This compelling memoir takes readers through the eyes of a child surviving World War II in Nazi-occupied Poland. As a nine-year-old, the author witnessed his father being herded into a truck—never to be seen again. He, his mother, and sister fled to Warsaw to live in disguise as Catholics under the noses of the Nazi SS, constantly fearful of discovery and persecution. A sobering reminder of the personal toll of the Holocaust on Jews during World War II, this book is a harrowing portrait of one child's loss of innocence. This edition contains previously unpublished content from the original text."--Publisher description.

External links