An important new primary source for Holocaust studies, this
unusual memoir contains the recollections of a Holocaust survivor
who lived in a small Polish town 55 miles from Warsaw. From his
earliest memories of a closely knit community where Jews and
Christians lived harmoniously side by side through the horrors of a
town torn apart by hatred, Shraga Bielawski details the systematic
destruction of Wegrow by the Nazis. How does a town go completely
mad? How do neighbors who have attended school together become
murderers and victims on opposite sides? What is the process by
which an invading army sends innocent civilians to their
deaths--leaving only traces of a former civilized culture?
Bielawski explores these and similar questions as he chronicles the
experiences of his friends and neighbors under the Nazis and shows
how he used all the tools of creativity at his disposal in order to
survive.
Throughout, Bielawski and co-author Louis Liebovich offer
historical background and political discussion to place the events
of the book in perspective. The reader learns first-hand about life
in occupied Poland, the virtual extinction of Jewish culture in
that country, and the ways in which the Nazis preyed upon latent
anti-Semitism to accomplish their goals. The book also offers some
penetrating observations on the nature of bigotry, concluding that
it is a disease that must be addressed by both the dominant culture
and the minority culture if another Holocaust is to be avoided. Far
more than a simple memoir, "The Last Jew of WegroW" is a sweeping
saga of imagination and perseverance--an enriching educational
experience for high school and college students as well as general
readers who seek insights into the Holocaust and its roots.
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