Difference between revisions of "File:1967 Virtzberg Beni.jpg"
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{ | {he} [[Beni Virtzberg]]. ''Milayl Habedolah Ve'ad Laylot Hakrav'' [From Kristallnacht to the Nights of Battle] (Jerusalem: Masada Press, 1967). | ||
== Translations == | |||
* {en} ''From Death to Battle: Auschwitz Survivor and Palmach Fighter'' (Jerusalem: Yad Vashem, 2017). | |||
* English tr. of the 1st Hebrew ed. (1967), ''Milayl Habedolah Ve'ad Laylot Hakrav'' [From Kristallnacht to the Nights of Battle] (Jerusalem: Masada Press, 1967). | * English tr. of the 1st Hebrew ed. (1967), ''Milayl Habedolah Ve'ad Laylot Hakrav'' [From Kristallnacht to the Nights of Battle] (Jerusalem: Masada Press, 1967). |
Latest revision as of 06:10, 21 March 2022
{he} Beni Virtzberg. Milayl Habedolah Ve'ad Laylot Hakrav [From Kristallnacht to the Nights of Battle] (Jerusalem: Masada Press, 1967).
Translations
- {en} From Death to Battle: Auschwitz Survivor and Palmach Fighter (Jerusalem: Yad Vashem, 2017).
- English tr. of the 1st Hebrew ed. (1967), Milayl Habedolah Ve'ad Laylot Hakrav [From Kristallnacht to the Nights of Battle] (Jerusalem: Masada Press, 1967).
Abstract
"When Beni Virtzberg was 9 years old, Kristallnacht destroyed his carefree childhood in his home town of Hamburg. Along with his parents, he was transported to Sosnowiec. Nazi Germany invaded Poland and the family shared the fate of many other Jews: internment in a ghetto, followed by deportation to Auschwitz. Beni's mother was murdered upon arrival. The young boy bravely fought to save his father's life, but he ultimately lost him as well. Beni's own fight for survival led him from Auschwitz, where he was forced to assist Joseph Mengele, to the death marches and to the notorious camps of Mauthausen and Melk. Upon liberation, Beni immigrated to Eretz Israel, joined the Palmach, and fought in some of the fiercest battles during Israel's War of Independence. During the Eichmann Trial, Beni decided to bear witness by writing his painful memoirs. The work on the book and the constant reminders of his agonizing past and losses took a great toll on him. On August 4, 1968, Beni Virtzberg took his own life."--Publisher description.
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