War in the Shadow of Auschwitz

War in the Shadow of Auschwitz
Title War in the Shadow of Auschwitz PDF eBook
Author John Wiernicki
Publisher Syracuse University Press
Total Pages 330
Release 2001-12-01
Genre History
ISBN 9780815607229

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1943: Polish underground fighter John Wiernicki is captured and beaten by the Gestapo, then shipped to Auschwitz. In this chilling memoir, Wiernicki, a Gentile, details "life" in the infamous death camp, and his battle to survive, physically and morally, in the face of utter evil. The author begins by remembering his aristocratic youth, an idyllic time shattered by German invasion. The ensuing dark days of occupation would fire the adolescent Wiernicki with a burning desire to serve Poland, a cause that led him to valiant action and eventual arrest. As a young non-Jew, Wiernicki was acutely sensitive to the depravity and injustice that engulfed him at Auschwitz. He bears witness to the harrowing selection and extermination of Jews doomed by birth to the gas chambers, to savage camp policies, brutal SS doctors, and rampant corruption with the system. He notes the difference in treatment between Jews and non-Jews. And he relives fearful unexpected encounters with two notorious "Angels of Death": Josef Mengele and Heinz Thilo. War in the Shadow of Auschwitz is an important historical and personal document. Its vivid portrait of prewar and wartime Poland, and of German concentration camps, provides a significant addition to the growing body of testimony by gentile survivors and a heartfelt contribution to fostering comprehension and understanding.

In the Shadow of Auschwitz

In the Shadow of Auschwitz
Title In the Shadow of Auschwitz PDF eBook
Author Daniel Brewing
Publisher Berghahn Books
Total Pages 356
Release 2022-06-10
Genre Political Science
ISBN 180073090X

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The Nazi invasion of Poland was the first step in an unremittingly brutal occupation, one most infamously represented by the network of death camps constructed on Polish soil. The systematic murder of Jews in the camps has understandably been the focus of much historical attention. Less well-remembered today is the fate of millions of non-Jewish Polish civilians, who—when they were not expelled from their homeland or forced into slave labor—were murdered in vast numbers both within and outside of the camps. Drawing on both German and Polish sources, In the Shadow of Auschwitz gives a definitive account of the depredations inflicted upon Polish society, tracing the ruthless implementation of a racial ideology that cast ethnic Poles as an inferior race.

In the Shadows of Paris

In the Shadows of Paris
Title In the Shadows of Paris PDF eBook
Author Anne Sinclair
Publisher National Geographic Books
Total Pages 0
Release 2021-11-30
Genre History
ISBN 1733395865

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A personal journey into a family’s history gradually becomes a historical investigation into the lesser known tragedy of the Nazi’s mass arrests of prominent French Jews and their imprisonment at the “camp of slow death” just fifty miles from Paris. “This story has haunted me since I was a child,” begins Anne Sinclair in a personal journey to find answers about her own life and about her grandfather’s, Léonce Schwartz. What her tribute reveals is part memoir, part historical documentation of a lesser known chapter of the Holocaust: the Nazi’s mass arrest, in French the word for this is rafle and there is no equivalent in English that captures the horror, on December 12, 1941 of influential Jews—the doctors, professors, artists and others at the upper levels of French society—who were then imprisoned just fifty miles from Paris in the Compiègne-Royallieu concentration camp. Those who did not perish there, were taken by the infamous one-way trains to Auschwitz; except for the few to escape that fate. Léonce Schwartz was among them.

In the Shadow of the Holocaust

In the Shadow of the Holocaust
Title In the Shadow of the Holocaust PDF eBook
Author Michael Fleming
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Total Pages 319
Release 2022-01-06
Genre History
ISBN 1009098985

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Examines the struggle to ensure that war crimes which took place during the Second World War were prosecuted.

In the Shadow of the Holocaust

In the Shadow of the Holocaust
Title In the Shadow of the Holocaust PDF eBook
Author Michael Fleming
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Total Pages 319
Release 2022-01-06
Genre History
ISBN 1009116606

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In the midst of the Second World War, the Allies acknowledged Germany's ongoing programme of extermination. In the Shadow of the Holocaust examines the struggle to attain post-war justice and prosecution. Focusing on Poland's engagement with the United Nations War Crimes Commission, it analyses the different ways that the Polish Government in Exile (based in London from 1940) agitated for an Allied response to German atrocities. Michael Fleming shows that jurists associated with the Government in Exile made significant contributions to legal debates on war crimes and, along with others, paid attention to German crimes against Jews. By exploring the relationship between the UNWCC and the Polish War Crimes Office under the authority of the Polish Government in Exile and later, from the summer of 1945, the Polish Government in Warsaw, Fleming provides a new lens through which to examine the early stages of the Cold War.

In the Shadow of Auschwitz

In the Shadow of Auschwitz
Title In the Shadow of Auschwitz PDF eBook
Author David Engel
Publisher
Total Pages 0
Release 2012
Genre History
ISBN 9780807865361

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In the Shadow of Auschwitz: The Polish Government-in-exile and the Jews, 1939-1942

The Girl in the Green Sweater

The Girl in the Green Sweater
Title The Girl in the Green Sweater PDF eBook
Author Krystyna Chiger
Publisher Macmillan + ORM
Total Pages 289
Release 2008-09-30
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 1429961252

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True story from the major motion picture "In Darkness," official 2012 Academy Award nominee for Best Foreign Language Film. In 1943, with Lvov's 150,000 Jews having been exiled, killed, or forced into ghettos and facing extermination, a group of Polish Jews daringly sought refuge in the city's sewer system. The last surviving member this group, Krystyna Chiger, shares one of the most intimate, harrowing and ultimately triumphant tales of survival to emerge from the Holocaust. The Girl in the Green Sweater is Chiger's harrowing first-person account of the fourteen months she spent with her family in the fetid, underground sewers of Lvov. The Girl in the Green Sweater is also the story of Leopold Socha, the group's unlikely savior. A Polish Catholic and former thief, Socha risked his life to help Chiger's underground family survive, bringing them food, medicine, and supplies. A moving memoir of a desperate escape and life under unimaginable circumstances, The Girl in the Green Sweater is ultimately a tale of intimate survival, friendship, and redemption.