Difference between revisions of "File:2005 Millman.jpg"
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== Title == | |||
Isaac Millman, ''Hidden Child'' (New York, NY: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2005). | |||
* See [[Isaac Millman (M / France, 1933), Holocaust survivor]] | |||
== Abstract == | |||
"A powerful story of survival, loss, and hope ... Isaac was seven when the Germans invaded France and his life changed forever. First his father was taken away, and then, two years later, Isaac and his mother were arrested. Hoping to save Isaac’s life, his mother bribed a guard to take him to safety at a nearby hospital, where he and many other children pretended to be sick, with help from the doctors and nurses. But this proved a temporary haven. As Isaac was shuttled from city to countryside, experiencing the kindness of strangers, and sometimes their cruelty, he had to shed his Jewish identity to become Jean Devolder. But he never forgot who he really was, and he held on to the hope that after the war he would be reunited with his parents ... After more than fifty years of keeping his story to himself, Isaac Millman has broken his silence to tell it in spare prose, vivid composite paintings, and family photos that survived the war."--Publisher description. | |||
[[Category:Holocaust Children Studies--2000s]] | |||
[[Category:Holocaust Children Studies--English]] | |||
[[Category:Holocaust Children, 1933 (subject)]] | |||
[[Category:Holocaust Children, France (subject)]] | |||
[[Category:Holocaust Children, Memoirs (subject)]] | |||
[[Category:Hidden Children (subject)]] | |||
[[Category:Hidden Children, France (subject)]] |
Latest revision as of 14:10, 21 February 2022
Title
Isaac Millman, Hidden Child (New York, NY: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2005).
Abstract
"A powerful story of survival, loss, and hope ... Isaac was seven when the Germans invaded France and his life changed forever. First his father was taken away, and then, two years later, Isaac and his mother were arrested. Hoping to save Isaac’s life, his mother bribed a guard to take him to safety at a nearby hospital, where he and many other children pretended to be sick, with help from the doctors and nurses. But this proved a temporary haven. As Isaac was shuttled from city to countryside, experiencing the kindness of strangers, and sometimes their cruelty, he had to shed his Jewish identity to become Jean Devolder. But he never forgot who he really was, and he held on to the hope that after the war he would be reunited with his parents ... After more than fifty years of keeping his story to himself, Isaac Millman has broken his silence to tell it in spare prose, vivid composite paintings, and family photos that survived the war."--Publisher description.
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