Difference between revisions of "File:1998 Nieuwsma.jpg"

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[[Category:Holocaust Children Studies--English]]
[[Category:Holocaust Children Studies--English]]


[[Category:Holocaust Children, 1934 (subject)]]
[[Category:Holocaust Children, 1937 (subject)]]
[[Category:Holocaust Children, 1938 (subject)]]
[[Category:Holocaust Children, 1938 (subject)]]
[[Category:Holocaust Children, Poland (subject)]]
[[Category:Holocaust Children, Poland (subject)]]

Latest revision as of 14:39, 17 March 2022

{en} Milton J.Nieuwsma. Kinderlager (1998)

Abstract

A retelling of the experience of Tova Friedman, Frieda Tenenbaum, and Rachel Hyams, thrre of the youngest survivors from Auschwitz.

"As time begins to silence the first-person voices of older survivors, this account of the experiences of three young girls, one of them possibly the youngest survivor of the death camp of Auschwitz-Birkenau, comes as a powerful witness to the Holocaust. Tova Friedman, Frieda Tenenbaum, and Rachel Hyams all came from the same small town in Poland. After a series of ghettos and forced labor camps, all three girls were transported to Auschwitz with their mothers and for a time were together in the Kinderlager barracks-the children's section. By a twist of fate, when the final Nazi cry of "Alle Juden raus!" echoed through the camp, each of the girls was hidden by her mother instead of joining what was for many a death march. On January 27, 1945, the date of their liberation and, subsequently, the date celebrated by the three women as their "birthday, " Tova was six years old, Frieda was ten, and Rachel was seven. Nieuwsma, a journalist, assembles the sometimes brutal oral histories of these women from childhood through liberation and the aftermath of displaced persons camps, the often futile search for scraps of information about surviving family, and the difficult decision to emigrate. In the story of each woman's adult life, there is a resurgence of hidden memory and post-traumatic stress; Tova speaks of "existential loneliness" during every holiday, Rachel of her never-ending search for "missing pieces, " and Frieda recalls that "if you cried in the war you were dead...But I can do it now, and it's a precious thing." The photographs of these women with their children and grandchildren are a testament to their strength and to the capacity of the human spirit to survive. Their intensely moving stories are a remarkable gift of insight to the Holocaust years and its implications for all of us."--Publisher description.

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