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This book has collaboration and translation at its heart: between
people, words and images, languages, cultures. The poems came
first, in Polish. Then came the photographic response to them. Then
four translators, MARTA DZIUROSZ, MARIA JASTRZEBSKA, DANUSIA STOK
and ELZBIETA WOJCIK-LEESE, took a set of 12 or 13 poems each and
translated them into English. All people involved were women: the
poet, the photographer, the four translators and the two editors.
Together they arrived at 51 Polish poems, 51 English poems and 51
photographs making this collection. They raise themes such as
cultural identity and migration, queerness, racism, isolation and
family memories.
Introduction by Deborah E. Lipstadt, author of Denial July 15,
1942, Wednesday Remember this day; remember it well. You will tell
generations to come. Since 8 o'clock today we have been shut away
in the ghetto. I live here now. The world is separated from me and
I'm separated from the world. Renia is a young girl who dreams of
becoming a poet. But Renia is Jewish, she lives in Poland and the
year is 1939. When Russia and Germany invade her country, Renia's
world shatters. Separated from her mother, her life takes on a new
urgency as she flees Przemysl to escape night bombing raids,
observes the disappearances of other Jewish families and, finally,
witnesses the creation of the ghetto. But alongside the terror of
war, there is also great beauty, as she begins to find her voice as
a writer and falls in love for the first time. She and the boy she
falls in love with, Zygmunt, share their first kiss a few hours
before the Nazis reach her hometown. And it is Zygmunt who writes
the final, heartbreaking entry in Renia's diary. Recently
rediscovered after seventy years, Renia's Diary is already being
described as a classic of Holocaust literature. Written with a
clarity and skill that is reminiscent of Anne Frank, Renia's Diary
also includes a prologue and epilogue by Renia's sister Elizabeth,
as well as an introduction by Deborah E. Lipstadt, author of
Denial. It is an extraordinary testament to both the horrors of
war, and to the life that can exist even in the darkest times.
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