PDF A Holocaust Memoir of Love Resilience Mama Survival from Lithuania to America Ettie Zilber 9789493056022 Books

PDF A Holocaust Memoir of Love Resilience Mama Survival from Lithuania to America Ettie Zilber 9789493056022 Books



Download As PDF : A Holocaust Memoir of Love Resilience Mama Survival from Lithuania to America Ettie Zilber 9789493056022 Books

Download PDF A Holocaust Memoir of Love Resilience Mama Survival from Lithuania to America Ettie Zilber 9789493056022 Books

With the Nazi occupation of Kovno (Lithuania), her life changed forever. Zlata Santocki Sidrer was Jewish, but she survived the horrors of the Holocaust. Gone was her normal life and her teenage dream of becoming a doctor. Instead, she witnessed untold deprivations, massacres, imprisonment, hunger and slave labor before being transported to the Stutthof Concentration Camp. Her story of the death march is a testament to her fighting spirit and the limits of human endurance. Yet the challenges did not end with liberation. Lovingly compiled from recorded interviews and researched by her eldest daughter, Ettie, this is an account of a remarkably resilient woman who raised herself out of the ashes after unimaginable hardship and sorrow. She found love and happiness where none could be expected—a secret marriage in the ghetto, escapes, dangerous border crossings, reunifications, and life-saving friendships. Ettie’s quest to learn more about her ancestry led her to Lithuania and Poland–in her mother’s footsteps. The author reflects on the impact of her family’s experiences on her own beliefs and behaviors, thereby adding to the literature about Second Generation and transgenerational trauma.In these memoirs she honors her family by telling their amazing story of survival and collects evidence to corroborate their painful history.

PDF A Holocaust Memoir of Love Resilience Mama Survival from Lithuania to America Ettie Zilber 9789493056022 Books


"This book introduces us to a 16-year-old girl who loves her family, goes to school, and flirts with boys - like most teenagers. Zlata's very normal adolescence is taken away by the arrival of the Germans in Lithuania in 1939. The horrors of the Holocaust are told through the experiences of Zlata and her family, but the focus of this book is on her resilience. Zlata remembers the people who died and the cruelty of the time, but those stories are backstage to her improbable wedding in the Jewish Ghetto and the camaraderie of a group of young women keeping each other alive on a death march.
This remarkable story is written by Zlata's daughter Ettie, who has transcribed her mother's memories. In the 2nd part of the book, Ettie describes retracing her mother's journey decades after it happened. She cites sources that provide important corroboration of her mother's memories.
This is an excellent book for schools who teach about this period of history. It is well written and importantly well cited in a world where some deny that the Holocaust ever happened. Its emphasis on love and resilience is an important lesson for young readers."

Product details

  • Paperback 222 pages
  • Publisher Amsterdam Publishers (January 23, 2019)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10 9493056023

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Tags : A Holocaust Memoir of Love Resilience Mama's Survival from Lithuania to America [Ettie Zilber] on . With the Nazi occupation of Kovno (Lithuania), her life changed forever. Zlata Santocki Sidrer was Jewish,Ettie Zilber,A Holocaust Memoir of Love Resilience Mama's Survival from Lithuania to America,Amsterdam Publishers,9493056023,Biography Autobiography/Jewish,HISTORY / Holocaust,History/Jewish - General,holocaust memoir; Lithuania; Kovno ghetto; true survivor story; Holocaust survivor story; Stutthof concentration camp; world war two memoir; WW2 memoir; second generation; 2gen; pre-war life in Kovno; Kaunas; death march; transgenerational trauma; epigenetics and war trauma,Biography Autobiography / Personal Memoirs

A Holocaust Memoir of Love Resilience Mama Survival from Lithuania to America Ettie Zilber 9789493056022 Books Reviews :


A Holocaust Memoir of Love Resilience Mama Survival from Lithuania to America Ettie Zilber 9789493056022 Books Reviews


  • Ettie's book is a very real first-person narrative of her mother's survival during the Holocaust. It is written in the mother's words, but it is about the Holocaust experience of many family members as well. The book shows an amazing ability to survive, do what needed to be done, and remain hopeful and positive regardless of separation from family members and dealing with all the horrors perpetrated against Jewish people. Her solution was to form very strong bonds with other women walking the same road as she. The hardship was very real and heart-wrenching. It is very well documented with footnotes and references. The book is in 3 parts. After the mother's story, part 2 is about the eldest daughter's 3-week travel to Lithuania and Poland with a long list of names, places, dates, and events. With the help of a guide and visits to Holocaust museums and digging into historical archives she was able to confirm her mother's story and make a few editorial changes to some details. Part 3 was an interesting analysis of the impact on the lives of the children of Holocaust-surviving parents. (The author was actually born in a Displaced Person's camp in Europe after the war ended before her parents---reunited only after the war---immigrated to the US.) Ettie researched this aspect within her own family and with other families living in NYC.
  • Even though the book is written by the daughter of the Survivor, the mother's experiences are in her own words and style. This book should be required reading in schools. History books give us dates, numbers of deaths; this is the history of one woman, a child at the time and shows of her life before, during and after the Holocaust. People can begin to understand how the individual Survivor actually survived. Ettie, explains how the children and grandchildren are affected by the Survivor parent or grandparent.
  • It was an amazing true story of a strong beautiful woman who went through and survived such horrible circumstances during the holocaust in Lithuania. It is amazing and scary to see how neighbors around her and her family turned on them and assisted the Germans in all the atrocities committed during the years of being in a ghetto and concentration camp and even after they were released. I couldn't put this book down!
  • This is a book of love, verification, necessity and caution. The horrific truth of the holocaust is felt. Insidious bigotry and the pain it generates continue. The presented concept of “intergenerational continuance of trauma” brings it forward. The author, Ettie Zilber, brings history to the present. In today’s political and social climate, this is a necessary read.
  • As the second world war recedes further into history and so many of the people involved in it are at advanced ages or dead, the question needs to be asked if it is important that we remember what happened 70 years ago. In this new book, Ettie Zibler answers that question with a resounding YES.

    This narrative is divided into two sections. In the first section, we get the story of Zlata Santocki Sidrer who was a teenager when the war broke out. She lived in Lithuania with her parents and sisters and their lives changed drastically when the war broke out. The family ended up in different concentration camps and she lost most of her family. She describes not only her time in the camps but also the time after the liberation when people were looking for family. It is amazing that they were able to find loved ones since things were so confusing at that time. The second part of the book is told by Ettie Zilber, one of the daughters of Zlata who went to Europe and visited the places that her mother had lived both before and after the war and visited the concentration camps. She is not only able to tell the story of her family's survival but is also able to look at it from the present day.

    This is an important record of the horrors of war and these books need to be read so that the same mistakes aren't made again.
  • This book introduces us to a 16-year-old girl who loves her family, goes to school, and flirts with boys - like most teenagers. Zlata's very normal adolescence is taken away by the arrival of the Germans in Lithuania in 1939. The horrors of the Holocaust are told through the experiences of Zlata and her family, but the focus of this book is on her resilience. Zlata remembers the people who died and the cruelty of the time, but those stories are backstage to her improbable wedding in the Jewish Ghetto and the camaraderie of a group of young women keeping each other alive on a death march.
    This remarkable story is written by Zlata's daughter Ettie, who has transcribed her mother's memories. In the 2nd part of the book, Ettie describes retracing her mother's journey decades after it happened. She cites sources that provide important corroboration of her mother's memories.
    This is an excellent book for schools who teach about this period of history. It is well written and importantly well cited in a world where some deny that the Holocaust ever happened. Its emphasis on love and resilience is an important lesson for young readers.
  • A Holocaust Memoir is not a story of grand heroes making sweeping gestures on the world stage. It is the quietly deep story of people bravely choosing to live. Their lives are not what they planned for, not what they expected. Zlata made a choice - LIFE - and with determination ensured that she, then her husband and ultimately her family lived life - completely and independently. Immediately you are drawn to this woman telling her story via daughter Dr. Ettie Zilber. I felt that I wa sin the room with Zlata, eating her delicious pastry, drinking tea and listening acutely to the story of her life. The horrific details unfold in an encompassing cocoon of understanding, appreciation, respect and finally - optimism. Dr. Zilber shares her mother's story, then broadens it with both her on site research and then with her psychological and educational and personal expertise. It is a window in a Jewish Europe that was, one that has disappeared. In a larger sense, it is a reflection of the human spirit, and the will to prevail.disappeared

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