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The uprooted : a Hitler legacy : voices of…
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The uprooted : a Hitler legacy : voices of those who escaped before the "final solution" (1993. Auflage)

von Dorit Bader Whiteman

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While much information exists on the dramatic fate of concentration camp victims, little is available about the Jewish men, women, and children who managed to escape before Hitler implemented mass executions and the death camps. The Uprooted: A Hitler Legacy is an extraordinary work featuring the stories of 190 escapees, lived through their own eyes and compellingly recollected in their own words. Dorit Bader Whiteman, a clinical psychologist and a refugee herself, depicts the experiences of these escapees: the persecution by citizens and officials; the abrupt confiscation of personal possessions; the raids and arrests; the quest to save the children; the dangers and fortuities in escape and resettlement; and the lasting emotional consequences of these experiences. By the end of the 1930s, European Jews fled to countries worldwide in search of a haven, among them England, Sweden, Turkey, South Africa, Argentina, Australia, Canada, and the United States. One of the most moving accounts is that of the Kindertransport of 10,000 Jewish children in 1939 from Nazi-occupied countries to Great Britain in trains so crowded that the smaller children had to be placed in luggage racks above the seats. Dr. Whiteman illustrates the spectrum of foster homes, ranging from the compassionate to the injurious, in which the Kinder, separated from their parents, were placed. It is equally poignant to read of the adult refugees who struggled to resettle in a new land unable to speak the language, without appropriate skills or education, without money or contacts, and filled with uncertainty over the fate of family and friends. The author provides important psychological insights into how these experiences have left the escapees to this very day with strength and with pain. The Uprooted, a landmark testament to the courage and resilience of this unstudied population, will be compelling reading for the lay person, as well as social scientists and historians, and for the survivors and their families.… (mehr)
Mitglied:JFR79
Titel:The uprooted : a Hitler legacy : voices of those who escaped before the "final solution"
Autoren:Dorit Bader Whiteman
Info:Cambridge, Mass. Perseus, c1993
Sammlungen:Deine Bibliothek
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The uprooted : a Hitler legacy : voices of those who escaped before the "final solution" von Dorit Bader-Whiteman

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One Amazon reviewer refers to this book as " a classic in the Holocaust literature. " It focuses on those who were able to escape, explains why so many stayed. There is a focus on Austria. Excellent. ( )
  carterchristian1 | Nov 10, 2011 |
A fascinating study of so-called "Holocaust escapees," Jewish people who were able to get out of Nazi Europe and waited out the war in faraway nations. Much has been written about Holocaust survivors, but very little on those that made it out just in time. The author is herself an escapee and records her own experiences in the book as well as others'.

There is a large section on the Kindertransport, of course, but this isn't the only segment of escapees covered. The author interviewed people who escaped to just about every region in the world, including North and South America, China, Australia and South Africa. The book was published in 1993 and it was probably the last chance to get firsthand the stories of people who were adults when they escaped -- by then these people were in their eighties and nineties. The books covers many aspects of the escapees' experiences, from their lives before the war, to the difficulties they had getting out of the country and finding some other place to go, to how their escape affected their attitudes in the decades following the war.

This is a very valuable book, not only because there is so little on the subject but because it's an excellent study and well-written. Of course the escapees were much more fortunate than those who weren't able to emigrate, and well they know, but that doesn't mean they had it easy. The stories of what they went through are yet another example of just how strong and resilient humans can be when necessary. ( )
  meggyweg | Sep 19, 2010 |
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While much information exists on the dramatic fate of concentration camp victims, little is available about the Jewish men, women, and children who managed to escape before Hitler implemented mass executions and the death camps. The Uprooted: A Hitler Legacy is an extraordinary work featuring the stories of 190 escapees, lived through their own eyes and compellingly recollected in their own words. Dorit Bader Whiteman, a clinical psychologist and a refugee herself, depicts the experiences of these escapees: the persecution by citizens and officials; the abrupt confiscation of personal possessions; the raids and arrests; the quest to save the children; the dangers and fortuities in escape and resettlement; and the lasting emotional consequences of these experiences. By the end of the 1930s, European Jews fled to countries worldwide in search of a haven, among them England, Sweden, Turkey, South Africa, Argentina, Australia, Canada, and the United States. One of the most moving accounts is that of the Kindertransport of 10,000 Jewish children in 1939 from Nazi-occupied countries to Great Britain in trains so crowded that the smaller children had to be placed in luggage racks above the seats. Dr. Whiteman illustrates the spectrum of foster homes, ranging from the compassionate to the injurious, in which the Kinder, separated from their parents, were placed. It is equally poignant to read of the adult refugees who struggled to resettle in a new land unable to speak the language, without appropriate skills or education, without money or contacts, and filled with uncertainty over the fate of family and friends. The author provides important psychological insights into how these experiences have left the escapees to this very day with strength and with pain. The Uprooted, a landmark testament to the courage and resilience of this unstudied population, will be compelling reading for the lay person, as well as social scientists and historians, and for the survivors and their families.

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