This title recounts the experience of a Jewish woman in Poland, who jumped from a train to save herself and her daughter from the Nazis, and their struggle to hide afterwards.
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The Holocaust journal of a lawyer--one of the few women admitted to Warsaw's bar--who survived largely on her considerable wits and nerve. This valuable journal, written just after the war, was discovered by the author's daughter a half century later, after her mother passed away in 1979. As evidenced in this journal, her courage, stamina, and flair for dramatic details are impressive. For instance, she recalls how in 1939 the haughty German victors marched into Warsaw ``through empty streets where fires had not yet been extinguished and human and animal corpses not buried.'' Her portrait of life in the Warsaw Ghetto is made vivid through such images as the portrait of a young beggar who recites poems to earn a few scraps of bread for his formerly wealthy parents. When Cyprys and her young daughter Eva are captured and put aboard a cattle car for Treblinka, she uses a small metal saw she has concealed in her boot to cut through the bars of a window and, after offering her bag of food to reluctant fellow passengers to throw her child out after her, leaps to freedom in the snowy woods. Her Aryan looks, the gift of a Polish marriage certificate, and her facility with languages help her survive and even visit the Warsaw ghetto and witness the uprising in 1943. She was eventually liberated by the Russians and recovered Eva from the Polish woman who had given her shelter. After the war, Cyprys joined her parents and sister in Palestine. She was uncomfortable there, feeling that ``being Jewish was like choosing to be persecuted, choosing death,'' and eventually joined her brother in England. As Martin Gilbert notes in his brief introduction, this lucid and intense journal is most significant for its rare new glimpses into the Warsaw Ghetto and its uprising. (10 photos, not seen) -- Copyright ©1997, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
YAAA spellbinding Holocaust memoir by a woman who lived in the Warsaw ghetto from the beginning to almost the end in 1943. Cyprys was a successful lawyer before the war. When the Nazis attacked Poland in 1939, she only gradually realized the deadly peril faced by all Jews. Her world crumbled as her husband's army unit vanished, her parents escaped, and the Nazis began to enforce humiliating restrictions. Alone, pregnant, and Jewish, she was deprived of her profession, apartment, and social standing and endured forced labor, hunger, overcrowding, constant fatigue, and anguish. Her courage, cleverness, reflexes, and luck saved her many times from deportation to the camps. The lucky possessor of a work permit, she hid her baby under furs she sewed, eluded several roundups, and had a plan when finally entrained to Treblinka. With the baby, she jumped from the moving car, survived the winter night and returned to Warsaw. By an incredible act of kindness, she obtained an Aryan alias and worked as a servant, her baby concealed by the Underground. She chronicled her experiences in a 1946 journal found after her death decades later. This amazing story of courage, cruelty, and compassion will keep YAs turning the pages to the end, and the excellent details of wartime life in the Warsaw ghetto make it a valuable addition to Holocaust collections.ACatherine Noonan, Fairfax County Public Library, VA
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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Paperback. Condition: Fair. 243 pages. Ex-library. Cover worn.When the Germans invaded Poland, Ruth Altbeker Cyprys, a young Jewish woman, was practicing as a lawyer in Warsaw. By September 1942, she knew the fate await ing those being herded onto trains bound for Treblinka. Her response was to plan. Seller Inventory # 158x
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