Photo de l'auteur

Lucie Adelsberger (1895–1972)

Auteur de Auschwitz: A Doctor's Story

2 oeuvres 51 utilisateurs 1 Critiques

Œuvres de Lucie Adelsberger

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1895-04-12
Date de décès
1972-11-02
Sexe
female
Nationalité
Germany (birth)
USA
Lieu de naissance
Nuremberg, Germany
Lieu du décès
New York, New York, USA
Lieux de résidence
Berlin, Germany
New York, New York, USA
Études
University of Erlangen
Professions
physician
pediatrician
memoirist
Holocaust survivor
immunologist
allergist
Courte biographie
Lucie Adelsberger was born in Nuremberg to a German Jewish family and had two younger siblings. She graduated from gynmnasium (high school) and in 1914 began to study medicine at the nearby University of Erlangen. In 1919, she was certified as a physician. She went to Berlin to work at the Friedrichshain municipal hospital, where she received a postgraduate diploma in internal medicine (1925) and in pediatrics (1926). She went into private practice as a pediatrician with a focus on allergies and also held a research position at the Robert Koch Institute. She published at least 15 scientific papers between 1924 and 1933. Her life changed drastically following the rise of the Nazi regime: she was dismissed from the Koch Institute and subjected to persecution. In 1938, she worked briefly at Harvard Medical School but chose to return to Germany to care for her ailing mother. In 1943, she was deported to the Nazi death camp at Auschwitz, where she struggled to help sick prisoners. As the Red Army approached in January 1945, the inmates of the camp were forced to march west in freezing conditions. She survived this ordeal and was sent to Ravensbrück, where she was liberated at the end of the war. She wrote a report on diseases in the camp that was published in the Lancet in 1946. After the war, she never published again on allergy. She emigrated to the USA and worked as an immunologist at Montefiore Medical Center in the Bronx, New York. In 1956, she published a memoir in her native German that was finally published in English posthumously in 1995 as Auschwitz: A Doctor's Story.

Membres

Critiques

Loses half a point for the pointless introduction. Just read the account, of a woman who chooses to stay in German to tend to a ailing mother and asks questions about that horrible choice of sending her mother to an earlier grave and being able to escape what happened later or having tended her mother, having had to face Auschwitz. And the story continues like this, pointing out the terrible choices she had to make, offering glimpses of them, fragments that are heartbreaking.

Lucie Adelsberger offers her testimony here, offers it without apology or much sentimentalism. As a doctor she had value, this testimony is heartbreaking and heartwarming, that she survived without having too much hate and only pleading that we learn from the lessons is heartwarming.

The passages about saving poison to kill babies almost broke my heart.
… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
wyvernfriend | Jan 13, 2014 |

Listes

Statistiques

Œuvres
2
Membres
51
Popularité
#311,767
Évaluation
½ 3.7
Critiques
1
ISBN
6
Langues
1

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