Bookbot

In My Hands

Memories of a Holocaust Rescuer

Valutazione del libro

Parametri

  • 248pagine
  • 9 ore di lettura

Maggiori informazioni sul libro

In My Hands began as one non-Jew’s challenge to any who would deny the Holocaust. Much like The Diary of Anne Frank , it has become a profound document of an individual’s heroism in the face of the greatest evil mankind has known. In the fall of 1939 the Nazis invaded Irene Gut’s beloved Poland, ending her training as a nurse and thrusting the sixteen-year-old Catholic girl into a world of degradation that somehow gave her the strength to accomplish what amounted to miracles. Forced into the service of the German army, young Irene was able, due in part to her Aryan good looks, to use her position as a servant in an officers’ club to steal food and supplies (and even information overheard at the officers’ tables) for the Jews in the ghetto. She smuggled Jews out of the work camps, ultimately hiding a dozen people in the home of a Nazi major for whom she was housekeeper. An important addition to the literature of human survival and heroism, In My Hands is further proof of why, in spite of everything, we must believe in the goodness of people.

Pubblicazione

Acquisto del libro

In My Hands, Irene Gut Opdyke, Jennifer Armstrong

Lingua
Pubblicato
2001
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(In brossura),
Condizioni del libro
In buone condizioni
Prezzo
3,99 €

Metodi di pagamento

4,5
Molto buono
467 Valutazioni

Qui potrebbe esserci la tua recensione.

Titolo
In My Hands
Sottotitolo
Memories of a Holocaust Rescuer
Lingua
Inglese
Editore
Anchor
Pubblicato
2001
Formato
In brossura
Pagine
248
ISBN10
0385720327
ISBN13
9780385720328
Serie
Valutazione
4,45 su 5
Descrizione
In My Hands began as one non-Jew’s challenge to any who would deny the Holocaust. Much like The Diary of Anne Frank , it has become a profound document of an individual’s heroism in the face of the greatest evil mankind has known. In the fall of 1939 the Nazis invaded Irene Gut’s beloved Poland, ending her training as a nurse and thrusting the sixteen-year-old Catholic girl into a world of degradation that somehow gave her the strength to accomplish what amounted to miracles. Forced into the service of the German army, young Irene was able, due in part to her Aryan good looks, to use her position as a servant in an officers’ club to steal food and supplies (and even information overheard at the officers’ tables) for the Jews in the ghetto. She smuggled Jews out of the work camps, ultimately hiding a dozen people in the home of a Nazi major for whom she was housekeeper. An important addition to the literature of human survival and heroism, In My Hands is further proof of why, in spite of everything, we must believe in the goodness of people.