Download , by Susan Dworkin Edith Hahn-Beer
Genau das, was fangen Sie an zu lesen , By Susan Dworkin Edith Hahn-Beer Anleitung Suche , die Sie lieben erste zu überprüfen oder ein faszinierendes E-Books finden , By Susan Dworkin Edith Hahn-Beer , die Sie machen mögen , lesen? Jeder hat Unterschied mit ihrem Faktor eine Publikation , By Susan Dworkin Edith Hahn-Beer Aktuar Lese, Gewohnheit der Überprüfung muss von früher sein. Viele Leute werden könnte lieben zu überprüfen, aber nicht eine Publikation. Es ist nichts auszusetzen. Eine Person wird sicherlich langweilig das dicke Buch mit kleinen Worten zu öffnen zu überprüfen. In mehr, dann ist dies das eigentliche Problem. So tritt wahrscheinlich mit diesem , By Susan Dworkin Edith Hahn-Beer
, by Susan Dworkin Edith Hahn-Beer

Download , by Susan Dworkin Edith Hahn-Beer
Follow-up, was wir mit Sicherheit in diesem kurzen Artikel verwenden zu , By Susan Dworkin Edith Hahn-Beer Sie wirklich verstehen, dass diese Veröffentlichung als das effektivste Anbieter Buch heute kommen. Also, wenn Sie wirklich ein großer Leser sind oder Sie sind Anhänger des Autors, es wird sicher lustig, wenn Sie nicht über diese Veröffentlichung haben. Es bedeutet, dass Sie dieses Buch bekommen müssen. Für Sie, die beginnen, mehr über etwas Neues und zu lernen, wie dieses Buch wirklich das Gefühl, interessiert über, dann ist es sehr einfach, dann. Einfach dieses Buch und auch spüren, wie diese Publikation, die Sie viel interessanten Unterricht anbieten.
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Produktinformation
Format: Kindle Ausgabe
Dateigröße: 7738 KB
Seitenzahl der Print-Ausgabe: 346 Seiten
Verlag: William Morrow (31. Januar 2012)
Verkauf durch: Amazon Media EU S.Ã r.l.
Sprache: Englisch
ASIN: B006ID6NDQ
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Durchschnittliche Kundenbewertung:
4.6 von 5 Sternen
14 Kundenrezensionen
Amazon Bestseller-Rang:
#212.880 Bezahlt in Kindle-Shop (Siehe Top 100 Bezahlt in Kindle-Shop)
To be able to live responsibly in the future, you need to learn about the past; think about it and learn from the mistakes that were made. The book - a personal account of a Jewish woman hiding Nazi Germany - is touching in a rather unique way. With an extremely open style of writing, the book forces you to listen.Everyone interested in recent history, or biographies will like reading this book.
The book was very gripping. A real insinde view of what Austria and Germany was like in the second world war.
Das Buch ist sehr spannend und rührend. Ich interessiere mich sehr für die Schicksale der Juden in Nazi-Deutschland und habe auch viele Bücher darüber gelesen. Dieses Buch ist eines der besten.
Edith Hahn's story is surprisingly well written for an amateur; she is not self-censoring as far as one can make out. She tells the truth about her family, their life in Vienna where her parents run a restaurant, her happy childhood memories and focus on boys; her irritation with one sister who was self-pitying and unhappy. She is smart as a whip, gets into the law faculty of Vienna's university and almost graduates as one of the top law students - except that the Anschluss arrives before she takes her final exams. Her boyfriend, a "Mischling" (halfJew) is witty and wonderful and a perfect companion, but in the end, he betrays her and favors his gentile mother who lives in fear of the Jews and their coming near her son, after the Jewish father dies. She stays, in fact, well past the point of safe passage out of the Third Reich principally because of him. She winds up on an asparagus farm with other Jewish women doing dreadful and miserable farm work. Next, she's transfered to a cardboard-box factory. She gets out of there by feigning a return to Vienna to join her mother in a mandatory transport to Poland, but on the train she rips off the yellow star and returns to Vienna as an undercover Gentile. She gets false papers from a family friend/doctor, then uses them to get to Munich, where she lives with a family and helps them run a home-based tailoring business. That's how she meets her first husband, a German working in an airplane factory as a painter. She does love him to some extent, but mainly she sees marriage to this rather off-balance traditional man as a way to stay safe during the war. As a hausfrau, she's got the perfect disguise, and they have a child. He is drafted and sent to Russia, winds up in a POW camp in Siberia. She winds up alone with the child in Brandenburg after the war, and the Russians are there. She tries to pull strings to get him out early. He suddenly appears in their doorway, by which time she is now working as a judge in dealing with family law cases. Her salary is good, she is secure, and her husband balks at his sudden relegation to unemployment and a wife who doesn't darn his socks and who expects that he might pick up the fish for dinner. He explodes, hits her violently in front of the child, and disappears, ultimately rejoining his first wife. Our heroine gets out of East Germany and takes off for England. Whew! There, I think I gave away the plot more or less.But commentary: she is honest, tells her own opinion and reveals the little slips and errors that somehow save her. She is very well-educated for a woman of her time, speaking and writing English and French. She abhors the thought of her mother working as a maid, cleaning up for Germans. If you read a lot of the Holocaust literature written by women, most had had Gentile maids and could not imagine doing such work, nor did they know how to do it. If they were lucky enough during the war to be assigned to such a job, instead of a labor camp, they felt so enraged and humiliated, as well as inept and helpless in the work, that it becomes a major focus in the writing. I find it an interesting detail that male biographies and diaries do not mention. It was also because of Germany's pro-natalist policy that she does so well as a mother and housewife. One of the great shocks for her is a chance acquaintance in a park when a gentleman joins her in a walk, spontaneously. The time is after the war. He is a Jew, he reveals, and they are both "u-boots" who managed to swim under the surface during the war. He tells her that he could recognize immediately that she was Jewish. She is astounded in retrospect that the Germans she lived amongst couldn't recognize her typical Jewish features. She doesn't speculate as to an answer, but I can guess that many Germans were trained to hate Jews through propaganda yet in their everyday lives had little real contact with them, and never really studied their features. In a city with many Jews, such as Vienna, there was much higher recognition, of course. I remember that in my years living in Germany, no one recognized me as an Irishman, in spite of reddish hair, freckles, blue eyes and all other typical features of a "mick". In the USA or Canada, England or Australia, they know. In Germany, they thought I was an American whose parents were German but who had neglected to teach me the language properly.This is a story "mit Happy=end" as they say. She moved to Israel after the death of her second husband and lives contentedly there with her daughter, Angela, daughter of a Nazi officer. I would recommend this book to all who appreciate honesty and a female educated perspective.
My first reaction was to concur with the positive responses of other readers. This is a fascinating story, skillfull told, filled with feeling, driven by constant forward motion. However, on second thought I had to wonder about the choices this author made.She spent five years in the 1930's studying law in Vienna. Surely she could have realized, once the Nazis came to power in Germany, that German law was not a promising field. But she remained in Vienna with her intellectual boyfriend, Pepi, also a law student. When her sisters and 100,000 Viennese Jews fled Hitler in the late '30's, she couldn't leave because she was carrying on this affair, and her boyfriend refused to emigrate. She wasted precious time on a go-nowhere relationship; he wouldn't marry her, wouldn't leave his mother, and wouldn't even shelter her for a night when she was desperate and homeless. She realized too late that Pepi was a dead end. Whereupon she became first mistress, then wife, of a Nazi. This was a cooly rational bargain, after the failure of idealistic young love.In hindsight, she would have been better off following her father's advice to become a seamstress. She wouldn't have met the brilliant intellectual Pepi, and sewing is a survival skill transferrable anywhere in the world. German law was worthless in her future life in England, and indeed, she worked as a seamstress in the years after the war.I do not wish to discount the author's deep suffering, or to imply it was her fault. In no way. But it was avoidable had she made other choices. Perhaps her wish for intellectual prestige blinded her to practical realities, that and her obsessive attachment to a boyfriend.
This is a captivating story of survival that reached epic proportions that stirred sympathetic emotions in me throughout the read. Edith Hahn, an Austrian Jewish woman survived as she did, outside the concentration camps with a formidable strength and will to survive that amazed me, staring the enemy straight in the eyes under the false identity of a Aryan German.The horrors of life for Jews during those holocaust years are vividly portrayed, allowing us to see the dark side of man that should not be allowed to haunt humanity. SURVIVAL IN AUSCHWITZ and DISCIPLES OF FORTUNE are other survival novels that bring us closer to what it must have been like for the powerless victims of the holocaust.
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