Status
Off Shelf
Call number
Collections
Publication
University of Tennessee Press (1997), Edition: 1st, 200 pages
Description
Personal account of the Holocaust by a woman who managed to survive at both Auschwitz and Bergen-Belsen, relating the horror of the camps at the hands of the Nazis and discusses her liberation, eventual immigration to America, and ability to find peace and happiness.
Media reviews
Kliatt
Mira Kimmelman, ne� Ryzke, was born in Zoppot, a suburb of the prosperous port city of Danzig, Poland, in 1933. In the face of the changing political climate, as many friends and neighbors emigrated, her father chose to remain. With the arrival of the Germans and the capitulation of Poland in
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1939, it was too late; the fate of the Ryzke family was sealed. From the Warsaw to the Tomaszow ghettos, through a chain of concentration camps -- Blizen-Majdanek to Auschwiz-Hindenberg to the liberation at Bergen-Belsen, Mira and her father survived; her mother was killed at Treblinka while her beloved brother Benno succumbed at Mauthausen. In all, 20 members of her immediate family perished. Her story is told simply and eloquently. Her final admonition to this and future generations, that such brutality should never again happen, is, "Teach it, tell it, read it." Show Less
Language
Original language
English
Physical description
200 p.; 8.1 inches
ISBN
0870499564 / 9780870499562