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A Lucky Child A Memoir Of Surviving Auschwitz As A Young Boy Thomas Buergenthal

  • SKU: BELL-2463526
A Lucky Child A Memoir Of Surviving Auschwitz As A Young Boy Thomas Buergenthal
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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A Lucky Child A Memoir Of Surviving Auschwitz As A Young Boy Thomas Buergenthal instant download after payment.

Publisher: Back Bay Books
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 1.34 MB
Author: Thomas Buergenthal
ISBN: 9780316043397, 0316043397
Language: English
Year: 2010

Product desciption

A Lucky Child A Memoir Of Surviving Auschwitz As A Young Boy Thomas Buergenthal by Thomas Buergenthal 9780316043397, 0316043397 instant download after payment.

From Publishers Weekly Not many children who entered Auschwitz lived to tell the tale. The American judge at the International Court of Justice in the Hague, Czechoslovakia-born Buergenthal, is one of the few. A 10-year-old inmate in August 1944 at Birkenau, Buergenthal was one of the death camp's youngest prisoners. He miraculously survived, thanks, among others, to a friendly kapo who made him an errand boy. Buergenthal's authentic, moving tale reveals that his lifelong commitment to human rights sprang from the ashes of Auschwitz. 16 b&w photos, 1 map. *(Apr. 20)* Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. From Booklist You think you’ve heard it all: the roundups, deportations, transports, selections, hard labor, death camps (“That was the last time I saw my father”), crematoriums, and the rare miracle of survival. But this one is different. The clear, nonhectoring prose makes Buergenthal’s personal story––and the enduring ethical questions it prompts––the stuff of a fast, gripping read. Five years old in Czechoslovakia at the start of World War II, Buergenthal remembers being crowded into the ghetto and then, in 1944, feeling “lucky” to escape the gas chambers and get into Auschwitz, where he witnessed daily hangings and beatings, but with the help of a few adults, managed to survive. In a postwar orphanage, he learned to read and write but never received any mail, until in a heartrending climax, his mother finds him. In 1952, he immigrated to the U.S., and now, as human-rights lawyer, professor, and international judge, his childhood’s moral issues are rooted in his daily life, his tattooed number a reminder not so much of the past as of his obligation, as witness and survivor, to fight bigotry today. --Hazel Rochman

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