Europa, Europa
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- 19,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
The Inspiration Behind The Golden Globe-Winning Film
"An engrossing and memorable tale."-Jewish Book World
"The sheer emotion of telling the tale is palpable. The whole is moving, and strange beyond belief." -The Times (London)
International acclaim for Solomon Perel's Europa Europa
The wrenching memoir of a young man who survived the Holocaust by concealing his Jewish identity and finding unexpected refuge as a member of the Hitler Youth.
"It is a Holocaust memoir that is moving, straightforward, and quite completely bizarre, unsettling in all kinds of assumptions about identity, responsibility, and guilt." -Glasgow Herald
"Perel bares his soul to readers in this fascinating, unusual personal narrative of the Holocaust." -Book Report
"Many of the experiences of Holocaust survivors are incredible. None is more incredible than the story of a Jewish boy, Solomon Perel, who escaped from Germany to Russia, served with the Wehrmacht in Russia, was adopted by his commanding officer, and transferred to an elite Hitler Youth school." -London Jewish News
"A most remarkable story . . . extraordinary." -The Australian
"This book will move human hearts." -Berliner Morgenpost
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Perel's involving if vexing memoir, dramatized in a film of the same name, deals with the years the author spent hiding his Jewish identity. In 1935, the Perel family, German Jews, emigrated to Poland because of Hitler's anti-Semitic laws. After Poland was invaded in 1939, his parents urged the then 16-year-old author and his 19-year-old brother, Isaac, to escape before a roundup of Jews took place. Soon separated from Isaac, the author assumed the identity of a racially pure German when he was detained by the invading army. So successful was his deception that the German officers permitted him to work as a translator and facilitated his transfer to an elite school for Hitler youth. Although the author was troubled by concealing his ancestry, he argues that he had no other choice. Perel was aware that his parents and sister had been forced into a ghetto, but he contends, despite the four years he spent living with German army officers, that he was unaware of the existence of the death camps (where his family perished) until after the war. Perel was later reunited with his brother and fought with the Israeli army. He is now a Tel Aviv businessman. Photos not seen by PW.