How much could the victims of the Holocaust have known of what awaited them? How much should they have known? The Right of Passage reveals how different members of a single German-Jewish family tried to flee the Nazi regime. The discovery of a cache of photographs leads the authors to hundreds of letters, on which the book is based. Newly translated from German, these exchanges among leading thinkers of the period vividly record an intellectual culture in flight, though none could grasp the nature of the evil that was coming. Most members of the family found safety in England, Ireland or America, some only just in time; the logician and philosopher Kurt Grelling, exiled in Belgium, was arrested when the Nazis invaded. Deported to France and interned by the Vichy regime, despite the efforts of friends, Grelling's attempts to find passage to America ultimately came to nothing. But his letters speak across the decades, urging us to question our unconscious attitudes to the millions of victims of the worst mass atrocity in history.
Jeg var Mengeles patolog: En læges øjenvidneskildring fra Auschwitz
Miklós Nyiszli
audiobookIntill slutet vill jag vittna : dagböcker 1933-1945
Victor Klemperer
bookDødens bolig : Auschwitz-Birkenau
Peter Langwithz Smith
audiobookbookFlugten fra Auschwitz
Rudolf Vrba
audiobookbookThe Pages In Between: A Holocaust Legacy of Two Families, One Home
Erin Einhorn
bookAuschwitz og efter
Charlotte Delbo
audiobookbookEksperimenter med mennesker - Dødens Engel fra Auschwitz
Gyldendal Gyldendal Stereo
audiobookEscape : From Holocaust survivors to prisoners behind the Iron Curtain: The saga of two families’ dramatic es
Jesper Clemmensen
bookVidner fra Holocaust
Jakob Lothe
audiobookIncidents in the Life of a Slave Girl. Written by Herself
Harriet Ann Jacobs
bookHolocaust 1: Dødsfabrikken Auschwitz - Massemordets største gerningssted
Else Christensen, Boris Koll, Alt Om Historie, Stine Overbye, Jan Ingar Thon
audiobookLivet tillbaka
Hédi Fried
book