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Olga Levy Drucker

Auteur de Kindertransport

2 oeuvres 272 utilisateurs 8 critiques 1 Favoris

Œuvres de Olga Levy Drucker

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Drucker, Olga Levy
Date de naissance
1928-12-28
Sexe
female
Nationalité
Germany (birth)
USA
Pays (pour la carte)
Germany
Lieu de naissance
Germany
Lieux de résidence
Stuttgart, Germany
England, UK
Florida, USA
Études
Your Mom
Professions
memoirist
Holocaust survivor
public speaker
Courte biographie
Olga Levy Drucker was born to a Jewish family in Germany. Her father was a well-to-do children's book publisher. After the rise of the Nazi regime to power when she was a small child, she experienced the mounting persecution of Jews. In 1939, when Olga was 11 years old, her mother arranged for her to be one of 10,000 Jewish children sent in the "Kindertransport" to Britain, where her brother Hans was already in school. The separation was traumatic and she spoke virtually no English at the time. She lived with a series of English hosts, including in a dingy, poverty-stricken flat; a luxurious house in which she was virtually ignored; and a boarding school. In 1945, she was able to make her way to the USA and be reunited with her parents and brother in New York. She gave talks at schools, libraries, and synagogues, and published a memoir of her experiences entitled Kindertransport in 1995.

Membres

Critiques

Every time Tisha b'Av rolls around, I seek out a meaningful, poignant book I can read while my fellow congregants and I drone on mindlessly with the Kinnot, while also passing their perfunctory inspections to make sure the material is on their nosyface level. This book fit the bill very well, and gave me a good, brief background on the Kindertransport, which is important for me to know about, because my wife's grandfather survived through this means. The book is written with a child's wonder, in the author's old age, which makes sense, because the POV of such traumas usually remain fixed in time, and told as such. Books like these are important, for they take the fuzzy, overwhelming, giant death statistics, and turn them into singular, human stories, which is known as the reason for Anne Frank's diary success. Turns out the author was one of the relatively lucky ones, in a world of abject horror.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
MartinBodek | 7 autres critiques | Oct 21, 2015 |
Every time Tisha b'Av rolls around, I seek out a meaningful, poignant book I can read while my fellow congregants and I drone on mindlessly with the Kinnot, while also passing their perfunctory inspections to make sure the material is on their nosyface level. This book fit the bill very well, and gave me a good, brief background on the Kindertransport, which is important for me to know about, because my wife's grandfather survived through this means. The book is written with a child's wonder, in the author's old age, which makes sense, because the POV of such traumas usually remain fixed in time, and told as such. Books like these are important, for they take the fuzzy, overwhelming, giant death statistics, and turn them into singular, human stories, which is known as the reason for Anne Frank's diary success. Turns out the author was one of the relatively lucky ones, in a world of abject horror.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
MartinBodek | 7 autres critiques | Oct 21, 2015 |
Prior to the beginning of World War II, a heroic effort was made to transport as many Jewish children as possible out of Germany. these efforts rescued over 10,000 Jewish children. Ollie's mother made arrangements for her eleven year old daughter to join the kindertransport and reach safety in England. Unable to speak English, Ollie is shuffled from home to home until at the age of 16 she leaves school to work for a family of seven. This is a touching memoir, which brings Ollie and her existence to life. Although her circumstances weren't perfect, she was able to survive and even thrive in a new country.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
JanaRose1 | 7 autres critiques | Mar 19, 2011 |
A good, but sometimes sad holocaust story. Agood read for girls who enjoy historical realistic fiction
 
Signalé
jebu0203 | 7 autres critiques | Feb 1, 2011 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
2
Membres
272
Popularité
#85,118
Évaluation
3.9
Critiques
8
ISBN
8
Langues
2
Favoris
1

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