Fotografía de autor

Sara Nomberg-Przytyk (1915–1996)

Autor de Auschwitz: True Tales From a Grotesque Land

3+ Obras 218 Miembros 2 Reseñas 1 Preferidas

Obras de Sara Nomberg-Przytyk

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Cena życia : rzecz o Sarze Nomberg-Przytyk (2016) — Associated Name — 1 copia

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Otros nombres
NOMBERG-PRZYTYK, Sara
NOMBERG PRZYTYK, Sara
Fecha de nacimiento
1915-09-10
Fecha de fallecimiento
1996
Género
female
Nacionalidad
Poland (born)
Canada (naturalized)
Lugar de nacimiento
Lublin, Poland
Lugar de fallecimiento
Canada
Lugares de residencia
Auschwitz, Poland
Bialystok, Poland
Israel
Quebec, Canada
Educación
University of Warsaw
Ocupaciones
journalist
memoirist
Holocaust survivor
writer
teacher
Biografía breve
Sara Nomberg-Przytyk was born in Lublin, Poland, to a Hasidic Jewish family. She turned to Communism in her youth, and was first imprisoned in 1934 for her politics. She graduated from gymnasium and attended the University of Warsaw. During the German invasion of World War II, she fled east to Bialystok, where she became a teacher. She was imprisoned in the Bialystok Ghetto in 1941-1943. In 1944, she was sent to the concentration camp at Stutthof and then to Auschwitz. There she survived partly because she worked in the relative safety of the camp infirmary. She returned to Poland after the war to help build the new Communist government, working as a journalist and editor, until she and most of the remaining Jews in Poland were forced out of the country between 1967 and 1968. She went to live in Israel and later with her son Jurek Przytyk on his farm in Quebec, Canada. Her memoir, Auschwitz: True Tales From a Grotesque Land, had to be smuggled out of Poland because it was deemed "too Jewish" by the authorities. She placed it in the care of the Yad Vashem archives in Israel, and it was published in English in 1985. Sara had also published two earlier memoirs in Polish and was writing another when she died.

Miembros

Reseñas

Wow, This was not an easy book to read but are any holocaust books? I think this one was even more so. These are memories from a survivor of Auschwitz. She shares details of individuals that are with her there from guards to other prisoners, There are stories about how people did awful things to save themselves and others of people that sacrificed themselves or put themselves at risk to help other prisoners. She goes through the hierarchy in the prison. Some people were able to go up in status for different reasons, sometimes, just because of who they knew. I guess I had never realized how different it was for various people in there. Some prisoners lived much better than others. They learned to find happiness at times but they also learned to just step over dead bodies without thinking about it. There was debating on whether or not it was kinder or more cruel to tell fellow prisoners what their fate was when they were heading to the showers or what would happen to them if they were sick or had children. There are people that you wonder what happened to them as we never find out. The chapter on the lovers hit hard.

What I always find interesting is how there seemed to be so much a fight to survive. To me, I don't know if I would have that or if I would be one to just give up. She states that there were very few suicides. How do people find the strength to go on in times like this? I am sure there are things that are not 100% accurate in this book as these were memories recalled years later but I am glad that I read this. It is a very haunting book on how people can treat others and the will to survive.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
KyleneJones | otra reseña | Apr 25, 2022 |
If you are only going to read one book about Auschwitz, let this be the one. Sara Nomberg-Przytyk did an excellent job of conveying the atmosphere of the place, all those people trying to live surrounded by death and the deepest despair imaginable. It's the stuff of nightmares. I could see everything she wrote about, like on a grainy black and white film (for how can there be color in Auschwitz?) in my head.

I do, however, dearly wish it had been subject to fact-checking before publishing. I am sure the book is the truth in the sense that the author told the events as she remembered them. But her memory is not always accurate, and one entire chapter is devoted to describing an event which I know for a fact did not happen and could not have happened. That's the kind of thing Holocaust deniers like to grab onto and use to bolster their so-called position.… (más)
 
Denunciada
meggyweg | otra reseña | Mar 6, 2009 |

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Obras
3
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1
Miembros
218
Popularidad
#102,474
Valoración
½ 4.5
Reseñas
2
ISBNs
4
Favorito
1

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