We Are Here

talking with Australia's oldest Holocaust survivors

Nonfiction, Social & Cultural Studies, Political Science, Biography & Memoir, History
Cover of the book We Are Here by Fiona Harari, Scribe Publications Pty Ltd
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Author: Fiona Harari ISBN: 9781925548464
Publisher: Scribe Publications Pty Ltd Publication: January 29, 2018
Imprint: Scribe Language: English
Author: Fiona Harari
ISBN: 9781925548464
Publisher: Scribe Publications Pty Ltd
Publication: January 29, 2018
Imprint: Scribe
Language: English

These are the last adult witnesses — in their own words.

When Adolf Hitler became Chancellor of Germany in 1933, he quickly began to realise his dream of a racially superior nation free of ‘inferior’ groups. His goal included the eradication of European Jewry, a plan that would ultimately claim six million lives. By 1945, almost two in three European Jews were dead. So were millions of other victims of Nazism.

For those who survived, liberation came with the enormous weight of guilt and memory as they began the second part of their lives, often in faraway places such as Australia, which would become home to one of the world’s highest per capita communities of Holocaust survivors.

Now the last of those adult survivors have reached an age once considered unattainable. They outlasted Nazism, and today, in their tenth and eleventh decades, have outlived most of their contemporaries. Eighteen of these Australians, originally from all over Europe, tell what it is like to have endured those years, and how they lived long after them.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

These are the last adult witnesses — in their own words.

When Adolf Hitler became Chancellor of Germany in 1933, he quickly began to realise his dream of a racially superior nation free of ‘inferior’ groups. His goal included the eradication of European Jewry, a plan that would ultimately claim six million lives. By 1945, almost two in three European Jews were dead. So were millions of other victims of Nazism.

For those who survived, liberation came with the enormous weight of guilt and memory as they began the second part of their lives, often in faraway places such as Australia, which would become home to one of the world’s highest per capita communities of Holocaust survivors.

Now the last of those adult survivors have reached an age once considered unattainable. They outlasted Nazism, and today, in their tenth and eleventh decades, have outlived most of their contemporaries. Eighteen of these Australians, originally from all over Europe, tell what it is like to have endured those years, and how they lived long after them.

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