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Zvi Preigerzon wrote memoirs about his time in the Gulag in 1958,
long before Solzhenitsyn and without any knowledge of the other
publications on this subject. It was one of the first eyewitness
accounts of the harsh reality of Soviet Gulags. Even after the
death of Stalin, when the whole Gulag system was largely disbanded,
writing about them could be regarded as an act of heroism.
Preigerzon attempted to document and analyze his own prison camp
experience and portray the Jewish prisoners he encountered in
forced labor camps. Among these people, we meet scientists,
engineers, famous Jewish writers and poets, young Zionists, a
devoted religious man, a horse wagon driver, a Jewish singer of
folk songs, and many, many others. As Preigerzon put it, "Each one
had his own story, his own soul, and his own tragedy."
Zvi Preigerzon (1900-1969), a Hebrew writer in the Soviet Union,
wrote this book in complete secrecy, to the extent that he even hid
its existence from his own family. The book is about the Jewish
community in Hadiach, a small town in Ukraine where Shneur Zalman
Schneerson, the founder of the Chabad movement, is buried. The town
was occupied by the German army during the war and most of its
Jewish population perished. Zvi Preigerzon describes the life of
the simple Jewish people and their suffering under the Nazis, with
a Kabbalistic spiritual touch: the Perpetual Flame of the Menorah
at the grave of Shneur Zalman Schneerson symbolizes the very spirit
of Jewish life, which it is said will persist as long as the flame
is burning.
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When the Menorah Fades (Paperback)
Zvi Preigerzon; Edited by Alex Lahav; Translated by Binyamin Shalom
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R759
R507
Discovery Miles 5 070
Save R252 (33%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Zvi Preigerzon (1900-1969), a Hebrew writer in the Soviet Union,
wrote this book in complete secrecy, to the extent that he even hid
its existence from his own family. The book is about the Jewish
community in Hadiach, a small town in Ukraine where Shneur Zalman
Schneerson, the founder of the Chabad movement, is buried. The town
was occupied by the German army during the war and most of its
Jewish population perished. Zvi Preigerzon describes the life of
the simple Jewish people and their suffering under the Nazis, with
a Kabbalistic spiritual touch: the Perpetual Flame of the Menorah
at the grave of Shneur Zalman Schneerson symbolizes the very spirit
of Jewish life, which it is said will persist as long as the flame
is burning.
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