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A Long Silence - Memories of a German Refugee Child, 1941-1958 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R395
Discovery Miles 3 950
You Save: R105
(21%)
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A Long Silence - Memories of a German Refugee Child, 1941-1958 (Paperback)
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Was R500
Loot Price R395
Discovery Miles 3 950
You Save R105 (21%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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After more than sixty years, the nightmarish sufferings of so many
victims of Germany's Nazi regime have been documented extensively.
Rarely, however, does one hear about the experiences of German
children during World War II. Coming of age amidst the chaos,
brutality, and destruction of war in their homeland, they had no
understanding of what was happening around them and often suffered
severe trauma and physical abuse.
This haunting memoir tells the riveting story of one such German
child. Born in Berlin in 1941, Sabina de Werth Neu knew little
during her earliest years except the hardships and fear of a war
refugee. She and her two sisters and mother were often on the run
and sometimes homeless in the bombed-out cities of wartime Germany.
At times they lived in near-starvation conditions. And as the
Allies stormed through the crumbling German defenses, the mother
and children were raped and beaten by marauding Russian soldiers.
After the war, like so many Germans, they wrapped themselves in a
cloak of deafening silence about their recent national and personal
history, determined to forget the past. The result was that Sabina
spent much of her time wrestling with shame and bouts of crippling
depression. Finally, after decades of silence, she could no longer
suppress the memories and began reconstructing her young life by
writing down what had previously seemed unspeakable.
Illustrated by vintage black-and-white family photographs, the book
is filled with poignant scenes: her abused but courageous mother
desperately trying to protect her children through the worst, the
sickening horror of viewing Holocaust footage on newsreels shortly
after the war, the welcome sight of American troops bringing hot
meals to local schools, and the glimmer of hope finally offered by
the Marshall Plan, which the author feels was crucial to her own
survival and that of Germany as a whole.
This book not only recalls the experiences of a now-distant war,
but also brings to mind the disrupting realities of present-day
refugee children. There is perhaps no more damning indictment of
war than to read about its effects on children, its helpless
victims.
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