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Patrick Henry, working with more than one thousand unpublished
autobiographical pages written by key rescuers and with documents,
letters, and interviews never before available, reconsiders the
Holocaust rescue of Jews on the plateau of Vivarais-Lignon between
the years 1939 and 1944. Henry carefully examines the general
research of the last quarter century on rescue in that area of
France, illuminating in detail the strengths and weaknesses of
Philip Hallie's groundbreaking study Lest Innocent Blood Be Shed
(1979) as they appear sixty years after the end of World War II. In
highlighting the involvement of Catholics, Protestants, and Jews in
the rescue mission, the book looks closely at the lives and work of
two rescuers on the plateau: a young Protestant man, Daniel Trocme,
and a Jewish mother of three, Madeleine Dreyfus, both of whom were
arrested and deported. Daniel died in the gas chamber at Maidanek;
Madeleine survived Bergen-Belsen. Madeleine provides an example of
a Jewish rescuer of Jews and raises the issues of so-called Jewish
passivity during the Holocaust. Also analyzed is Albert Camus'
chronicle, La Peste, written in large part during the fifteen
months he spent in a hamlet just outside the village of Le
Chambon-sur-Lignon from August 1942 until late 1943. As an
allegorical mirror, the text reflects both the violent and
non-violent resistance taking place when and where Camus composed
his narrative. Finally, Henry brings together his own findings and
those of others who have studied the rescuers throughout Europe in
order to understand rescuer motivation and to show incontrovertibly
why it is important not only to know about the victims and
perpetrators of the Nazi genocide but to study and teach more
widely about the rescuers of Jews during the Holocaust.
The essentials of communication for professionals, educators,
students, and entrepreneurs, from organizing your thoughts to
inspiring your audience.Do you give presentations at meetings? Do
you ever have to explain a complicated subject to audiences
unfamiliar with your field? Do you make pitches for ideas or
products? Do you want to interest a lecture hall of restless
students in subjects that you find fascinating? Then you need this
book. Make It Clear explains how to communicate--how to speak and
write to get your ideas across. Written by an MIT professor who
taught his students these techniques for more than forty years, the
book starts with the basics--finding your voice, organizing your
ideas, making sure what you say is remembered, and receiving
critiques ("do not ask for brutal honesty")--and goes on to cover
such specifics as preparing slides, writing and rewriting, and even
choosing a type family. The book explains why you should start with
an empowerment promise and conclude by noting you delivered on that
promise. It describes how a well-crafted, explicitly identified
slogan, symbol, salient idea, surprise, and story combine to make
you and your work memorable. The book lays out the VSN-C (Vision,
Steps, News-Contributions) framework as an organizing structure and
then describes how to create organize your ideas with a
"broken-glass" outline, how to write to be understood, how to
inspire, how to defeat writer's block--and much more. Learning how
to speak and write well will empower you and make you smarter.
Effective communication can be life-changing--making use of just
one principle in this book can get you the job, make the sale,
convince your boss, inspire a student, or even start a revolution.
The Complete Federalist and Anti-Federalist Papers written by
Alexander Hamilton & James Madison & John Jay and Patrick
Henry among others is widely considered by many to be among the
most important historical collections of all time. In "The
Federalist Papers," three of the founding fathers brilliantly
defend their revolutionary charter: the Constitution of the United
States. The Anti-Federalist Papers are a collection of articles,
written in opposition to the ratification of the 1787 United States
Constitution. Unlike the Federalist Papers written in support of
the Constitution, the authors of these articles, mostly operating
under pen names, were not engaged in a strictly organized project.
Major Anti-Federalist authors included Cato (likely George
Clinton), Brutus (likely Robert Yates), Centinel (Samuel Bryan),
and the Federal Farmer (either Melancton Smith, Richard Henry Lee,
or Mercy Otis Warren). Speeches by Patrick Henry and Smith are
included as well.
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