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Arnold Daghani's Memories of Mikhailowka - The Illustrated Diary of a Slave Labour Camp Survivor (Paperback)
Loot Price: R582
Discovery Miles 5 820
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Arnold Daghani's Memories of Mikhailowka - The Illustrated Diary of a Slave Labour Camp Survivor (Paperback)
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Loot Price R582
Discovery Miles 5 820
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Arnold Daghani (1909-85) came from a German-speaking Jewish family
in Suczawa, then in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, now Romania. His
understated narrative of his experiences in the slave labour camp
at Mikhailowka, south west Ukraine (1942-43), presented here in its
first English book edition, provides a day-by-day account of the
chilling experiences of Jewish slave labourers. It is written in a
compelling style and illustrated by watercolours and drawings that
Daghani made secretly in captivity and smuggled out of the camp and
a Romanian ghetto. It includes an extraordinary account of the
couple's escape and the shooting of over three hundred prisoners.
The uniqueness of Daghani's Holocaust testimony lies in his role as
an artist which led to his (and his wife's) escape from the camp
and their survival. The camps in Ukraine have been
under-investigated and the diary provides significant material. It
was used as the basis of investigations in the 1960s into war
crimes in the slave labour camps in Ukraine, helping to bring
attention to the region and providing some form of recognition for
those who suffered there. This richly illustrated and scrupulously
edited book is distinguished from more conventional Holocaust
memoirs by focusing on fundamental questions of historical
testimony and the problems of representation in both words and
images. Daghani's diary is contextualized on the basis of
wide-ranging new historical, archival and art historical research
in essays that document the artist's attempts to achieve justice
and reconciliation. They locate the diary in relation to
contemporary issues on migration and statelessness, genocide and
trauma, self-reflection and memory. The diary is both art and
document, addressing how we understand and construct history. It
enables readers to engage with the Holocaust via the viewpoint of
an individual, making statistics more meaningful and history less
distant.
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