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Philip Mechanicus (1) (1889–1944)

Autor von Year of fear: A Jewish prisoner waits for Auschwitz

Andere Autoren mit dem Namen Philip Mechanicus findest Du auf der Unterscheidungs-Seite.

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Bildnachweis: Digital Monument to the Jewish Community in the Netherlands

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Gebräuchlichste Namensform
Mechanicus, Philip
Andere Namen
Pére Celjenets
Geburtstag
1889-04-17
Todestag
1944-10-12
Geschlecht
male
Nationalität
Nederland
Geburtsort
Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Nederland
Sterbeort
Auschwitz, Polen
Wohnorte
Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Nederland
Westerbork Concentration Camp, Drenthe, Nederland
Auschwitz, Polen
Berufe
journalist
Beziehungen
Mechanicus, Philip (neef)
Kurzbiographie
Philip Mechanicus was born to a Jewish family in Amsterdam, The Netherlands, one of eight children of Elias and Sarah Mechanicus. After leaving school, he started working for the social-democratic daily newspaper Het Volk in the shipping and records department, and worked his way up to become a journalist. After doing his military service, he worked in the Dutch East Indies for the Sumatra Post in Medan and De Locomotief in Semarang. n 1919, he returned to The Netherlands. He joined the foreign affairs staff of the Algemeen Handelsblad in 1920. He wrote reports about the Soviet Union, which were later collected and published in book form as Van Sikkel en Hamer (From Sickle and Hammer, 1932), and about Palestine. After Nazi Germany invaded his country in World War II, he was barred from working as a journalist, and briefly wrote under the alias Pére Celjenets. In 1942, he was arrested and tortured by the Nazis for not wearing the yellow star. He was transferred to the Westerbork transit camp, where he kept a diary from May 28, 1943 to February 28, 1944. He was deported in March 1944 to the concentration camp of Bergen-Belsen, then sent to the death camp Auschwitz-Birkenau, where he was murdered on arrival. In 1964, his Westerbork diary was published as In dépôt: Dagboek uit Westerbork (English translation, Waiting for Death: A Diary), an important source of our knowledge about the camp. Koert Broersma published a biography called Buigen onder de storm: Levensschets van Philip Mechanicus (Bowing Under the Storm) in 1993.

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The diary of a middle-aged Dutch Jewish man in Westerbork, the Nazi transit camp for Dutch Jews en route to the East. Philip Mechanicus, a journalist by profession, deliberately recorded in detail all aspects of camp life, and his diary is one of the major sources for Westerbork.

The camp sounds fairly okay, as Nazi camps go. Food appears to have been fairly sufficient, for example, there was recreation, and families were allowed considerable contact with one another. Mechanicus notes: "The great multitude live on as they did at home, in the midst of all their suffering. They eat and drink and make love. The food is frugal, the drink is ersatz [artificial] and the love is unnatural. There is music... Artists, usually dilettantes, exercise their talent... Men and women play bridge together or skate... Men and women go visiting, just as at home, and have tea with one another." But there was the terrible overcrowding and resultant noise, filth and disease, and the ever-present threat of being put on a transport to Poland. Everyone knew that to be put on such a transport was bad, but no one seemed to realize that it was synonymous with death. Mechanicus managed to remain in Westerbork for a year and a half, an extraordinarily long length of stay, but eventually he too was sent to Auschwitz and killed.

The diary was difficult for me to read and took a long time, given its length. I wish it had been broken up by the month. There isn't even a demarcation for the year; the entries for December 1943 and January 1944 are on the same page without any comment on the turning of the year, besides the change in dates. I wish also that the introduction had provided more information about Mechanicus. I know from the diary that he had an Aryan ex-wife and at least one child by her, but nothing whatsoever is said about his personal life in the intro.

I learned a lot about Westerbork from this diary. I would recommend it, especially for comparison with diaries from other camps and ghettos like Theresienstadt, Lodz, Vught, etc.
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meggyweg | 1 weitere Rezension | May 12, 2010 |
I got this book as a present, but somehow I never got to read it. Just didn't attrack me very much, and WWII is not always a theme that is fit for all times of reading.
Now it is going on a journey, looking for new readers.
 
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BoekenTrol71 | 1 weitere Rezension | Mar 31, 2013 |

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Werke
2
Mitglieder
54
Beliebtheit
#299,230
Bewertung
3.8
Rezensionen
2
ISBNs
21
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