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'Through thick and thin, never separate. Stick together, guard each
other, and live for one another.' As Hitler's war intensified, the
Ovitz family would have good reason to stand by their mother's
mantra. Descending from the cattle train into the death camp of
Auschwitz, all twelve emerged in 1945 as survivors - the largest
family to survive intact. What saved them? Ironically, the fact
that they were sought out by the 'Angel of Death' himself - Dr
Joseph Mengele. For seven of the Ovitzes were dwarfs - and not just
any dwarfs, but a beloved and highly successful vaudeville act
known as the Lilliput Troupe. Together, they were the only
all-dwarf ensemble with a full show of their own in the history of
entertainment. The Ovitzes intrigued Mengele, and amongst the
thousands on whom he performed his loathsome experiments, they
became his prize 'patients': 'You're something special, not like
the rest of them.' It was this disturbing affection that saved
their lives. After being plunged into the darkest moments in modern
history, this remarkable troupe emerged with spirits undimmed, and
went on to light up Europe and Israel, which offered them a new
home, with their unique performances. Giants reveals their moving
and inspirational story.
My true wife and the best friend I ever had," wrote Ted Hughes
after Assia Wevill's 1969 suicide. Long seen as the woman who lured
Hughes away from Sylvia Plath, Wevill has remained a mysterious
figure. Now, for the first time Yehuda Koren and Eilat Negev tell
the story of Wevill's remarkable life and the seven years she spent
with Hughes before killing herself, and their daughter, in a manner
that inevitably recalled Plath's suicide six years earlier. Drawing
on previously unavailable papers, including Wevill's diaries and
intimate correspondence with Hughes, Koren and Negev offer a
gripping portrayal of the uneasy life the couple shared under
Plath's long shadow.
This remarkable, never-before-told account of the Ovitz family,
seven of whose ten members were dwarfs, bears witness to the best
and worst of humanity and to the terrible irony of the Ovitzes'
fate: being burdened with dwarfism helped them endure the
Holocaust. Through dogged research and interviews with Perla, the
youngest Ovitz daughter and last surviving sibling, and other
relatives, authors Yehuda Koren and Eilat Negev weave the tale of a
beloved and successful family of performers who were popular
entertainers in Central Europe until the Nazis deported them to
Auschwitz in May 1944. Descending from the transport train into the
hell of the concentration camp, the Ovitz family-known widely as
the Lilliput Troupe-was separated from other Jewish victims. When
Dr. Josef Mengele was then notified of their arrival, he assigned
them to sequestered quarters. His horrific "research" on twins and
other genetically unique individuals already under way, Mengele had
special plans for the Ovitzes. The authors chronicle Mengele's
loathsome experiments upon the family members, the disturbing
fondness he developed for these small people, and their
interminable will to make it out alive. Dozens of telling
photographs are included in this horrifying yet remarkable tale of
survival.
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