The Wartime Diary of Edmund Kessler: Jews of Poland
Autor Edmund Kessler Editat de Renata Kessleren Limba Engleză Paperback – 26 ian 2010
Din seria Jews of Poland
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781934843994
ISBN-10: 1934843997
Pagini: 160
Ilustrații: 15 b/w photos
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 10 mm
Greutate: 0.27 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Academic Studies Press
Seria Jews of Poland
ISBN-10: 1934843997
Pagini: 160
Ilustrații: 15 b/w photos
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 10 mm
Greutate: 0.27 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Academic Studies Press
Seria Jews of Poland
Recenzii
"The Wartime Diary of Edmund Kessler" is a slim volume with considerable power. In prose and poetry, Kessler describes the conditions of Jewish life in the large but understudied ghetto of Lwow, Poland. His observations are keen, precise, his tone reserved and understated. He writes simply: "needless to say, conditions were difficult." Elsewhere he says: "I owe my survival to the fact that admirable people still in the world". -- Michael Berenbaum, Director, Sigi Ziering Institute, Professor of Jewish Studies, American Jewish University (Los Angeles) "The Wartime Diary of Edmund Kessler is not only a gripping account of the fate of Lwow Jewry during the war but also a unique mirror of the parallel perspectives of the rescued and their rescuers. This rich collection includes Kessler's wartime diary, his wartime poetry, and a 1998 memoir by Kazimierz Kalwinski, the son of the Polish couple who hid Kessler, his wife and 22 other Jews on their farm. Kessler was not what many regard as "a typical Polish Jew." He was an accomplished attorney, highly educated and spoke Polish as his first language. But in a way, Kessler was representative of a now destroyed subculture, the rich world of pre-war acculturated middle class Galician Jewry, a world which combined a deep love of Polish culture with a strong devotion to Jewish identity. Kessler was both an attorney and a poet, a shrewd observer for whom the horrors that he was experiencing only encouraged him to reaffirm his humanity through poetry of witness. It is especially important that this collection includes Kalwinski's memoirs. To hide Jews in German occupied Poland was to expose oneself and one's family to the risk of execution. It was not so easy to procure food and to secure a hiding place from the scrutiny of prying eyes at a time when Germans were conducting constant searches for food and for hidden arms. How does one do this for 24 people? This book is indeed an important addition to our knowledge of the Holocaust". -- Samuel Kassow, Charles H Northam professor of history, Trinity College (Hartford, CT), author of Who Will Write Our History?
Notă biografică
Descriere
Dr. Kessler, a Jewish attorney from Lwow, Poland, gives an eyewitness account of the Holocaust through the events recorded in his diary. In vivid, raw, documentary style, he describes his experiences in the Lwow Ghetto, the Janowska Concentration Camp, and in an underground bunker where he and 23 other Jews were hidden by a courageous Polish farmer and his family.