Words to outlive us : eyewitness accounts from the Warsaw Ghetto

by Michal Grynberg (Editor)

Other authorsMichal Grynberg (Translator)
Paperback, 2004

Status

Available

Call number

940.53

Collection

Publication

Granta Books

Description

The story of the Warsaw Ghetto told through twenty-eight never-before-published accounts-a precious and historic find. In the history of the Holocaust, the Warsaw Ghetto stands as the enduring symbol of Jewish suffering and heroism. This collective memoir-a mosaic of individual diaries, journals, and accounts-follows the fate of the Warsaw Jews from the first bombardments of the Polish capital to the razing of the Jewish district. The life of the ghetto appears here in striking detail: the frantic exchange of apartments as the walls first go up; the daily battle against starvation and disease; the moral ambiguities confronting Jewish bureaucracies under Nazi rule; the ingenuity of smugglers; and the acts of resistance. Written inside the ghetto or in hiding outside its walls, these extraordinary testimonies preserve voices otherwise consigned to oblivion: a woman doctor whose four-year-old son is deemed a threat to the hideout; a painter determined to complete his mural of Job and his trials; a ten-year-old girl barely eluding blackmailers on the Aryan side of the city. Stunning in their immediacy, the urgent accounts recorded here provide much more than invaluable historical detail: they challenge us to imagine the unimaginable.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member meggyweg
This is a fine collection of accounts, most of which have never been previously published, that really gave me the sense of what it was like to live and fight and die in the Warsaw ghetto. The writers were a wide variety of people -- mostly Jews of course, but there were some gentiles, and even one
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young child -- and there were biographical sketches revealing details of each person's life and fate, if known. Recommended for scholarly Holocaust collections.
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LibraryThing member lynsbro
A book that brings home to us the nightmare of daily life under the Nazi persecutions.The nitty-gritty of finding food,finding work,holding on to some semblance of humanity in the worst of all scenarios.
A book to remind us of small heroisms,and to remind us of the human beings capability for
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evil,and capacity for suffering.
This ought to be standard reading in high school.
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Language

Original language

Polish

Physical description

493 p.

ISBN

186207660X / 9781862076600

Local notes

Donated by Adele Rosalky from the Earle Hoffman Private Library, March 2019

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