Alicia: My StoryBantam Books, 1988 - 356 Seiten Her name is Alicia. She was thirteen when she began saving the lives of people she did not know--while fleeing the Nazis through war-ravaged Poland. Her family cruelly wrenched from her. Alicia rescued other Jews from the Gestapo, led them to safe hideouts, and lent them her courage and hope. Even the sight of her mother's brutal murder could not quash this remarkable child's faith in human goodness--or her determination to prevail against overwhelming odds. |
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Seite 151
... morning , when the village awoke . I thanked him profusely for his hospitality , also looking at both Manka and Stach , and promised I would never bring danger to their home . I was the first one up the next morning . Manka had prepared ...
... morning , when the village awoke . I thanked him profusely for his hospitality , also looking at both Manka and Stach , and promised I would never bring danger to their home . I was the first one up the next morning . Manka had prepared ...
Seite 169
... morning of liberation had been like every other morning , with my getting up early to go into the village . I had already decided on the house I would be visiting ; it was that of a farmer for whom I had worked in the summer . I had ...
... morning of liberation had been like every other morning , with my getting up early to go into the village . I had already decided on the house I would be visiting ; it was that of a farmer for whom I had worked in the summer . I had ...
Seite 287
... morning I returned to Piotrkowska 28. I had thought seriously about what Tzivia had said , but I hadn't changed my mind . There had been too many times throughout the war when I had been responsible for the lives of others , and I knew ...
... morning I returned to Piotrkowska 28. I had thought seriously about what Tzivia had said , but I hadn't changed my mind . There had been too many times throughout the war when I had been responsible for the lives of others , and I knew ...
Inhalt
Before the War | 1 |
Life Under the Russians | 5 |
The German Occupation | 13 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Alicia Aliyah Bet asked Badgastein began Bella Bielsko bread Brecha Bronia brother Buczacz Bunio bunker Chernovtsy Chortkov cried crying door DP camp Eretz Israel eyes face farmer father felt field forest friends Germans Gestapo ghetto girl hand happened head hear heard heart Hebrew Herzl hiding inside Jewish Jewish Agency Jews Judenrat Jurman killed knew Kola Kopechince leave lived Lodz looked Mama Manka Mesha Milek morning mother moved Nazis night NKVD pain partisans Peppa Poland Poles police Polish potatoes prison pulled quickly Rachel realized remembered returned Russian Sharf sitting Slavka sleep sleigh smiled soldiers someone Soviet Union stay stood stopped street suddenly survived talk tears tell Theodor Herzl thought told took trying turned Tzivia Ukrainian UNRRA village voice waiting walked woman worried Wujciu Yiddish young Zachary
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Erased: Vanishing Traces of Jewish Galicia in Present-day Ukraine Omer Bartov,Visiting Raoul Wallenberg Professor Omer Bartov Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2007 |