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1 oeuvres 94 utilisateurs 3 critiques 1 Favoris

Œuvres de Ruth Elias

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Autres noms
Huppert, Ruth
Date de naissance
1922-10-07
Sexe
female
Nationalité
Czechoslovakia
Israel
Lieu de naissance
Privoz, Ostrava, Moravia, Czechoslovakia
Lieux de résidence
Ostava, Czechoslovakia
Beth Yitzchak, Israel
Theresienstadt concentration camp
Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp
Ravensbruck Concentration Camp
Taucha concentration camp
Professions
memoirist
Holocaust survivor
Courte biographie
Ruth Elias, née Hupper, was born to a Jewish family in the Moravian region of Czechoslovakia. She was a talented young pianist and hoped to become a professional musician. In 1939, the Germans entered her country in the prelude to World War II. The foreman of her father's factory immediately seized it from him and the family lost their apartment. They went into hiding on a farm near Brno, but were caught and sent to Theresienstadt. She had previously married, and became pregnant in the summer of 1943. She and her husband were deported to Auschwitz in December 1943. She was sent to Hamburg to work cleaning the debris at a bombed oil refinery. When it was discovered that Ruth was pregnant, she was sent to Auschwitz. She managed to remove the yellow star from her clothing and pose as a Czech political prisoner. Once her baby girl was born, SS doctor Josef Mengele ordered that her breasts be bound to prevent her from breastfeeding, so he could conduct an experiment on how long a baby could live without food. She secretly fed the baby with bread soaked in water, but the child grew weaker. A prisoner-doctor gave her a needle filled with morphine and she injected the baby, who had no chance to survive. Mengele sent her on the next transport to forced labor near Leipzig. There she was eventually liberated by the Allies at the end of the war and returned to Czechoslovakia, where she discovered that none of her family had survived. She went into a deep depression and spent time in a sanatorium, but eventually regained the will to live. She remarried to Kurt Elias, also a survivor, and emigrated to Israel in 1949. Her book about her Holocaust experiences, Triumph of Hope: From Theresienstadt and Auschwitz to Israel, was published in 1988.

Membres

Critiques

Mein Weg von Theresienstadt und Auschwitz nach Israel
 
Signalé
Buecherei.das-Sarah | 2 autres critiques | Dec 24, 2014 |
A better-than-average Holocaust memoir. Ruth Elias spent some time in Theresienstadt, married there, and arrived in Auschwitz pregnant. Most pregnant women are gassed immediately, but they missed her condition, and she became adept at hiding it. When they did find out, she was very close to giving birth. The infamous Mengele decided to keep Ruth around to experiment how long a newborn baby will live without being fed. So he bound Ruth's breasts up so she couldn't nurse the child, and left them together for seven terrible days and nights. Seven days, seven nights that she watched her firstborn disintegrate and die. Wailing loudly the first few days, then its cries became weaker, like those of a kitten, then it became too weak even to cry. On the seventh day, a compassionate Jewish doctor risked her life to steal some morphine. She gave it to Ruth, who injected it into the baby and killed it painlessly. I defy any reader to get through those few pages without getting tears in their eyes.

That Ruth survived all that, and more, is a testimony to just how resilient and adaptable we humans are. It was a good book, very detailed, telling everything matter-of-fact and without self-pity. Ruth was the only survivor in her immediate family. Her husband survived, but she split with him and married another survivor who lost his wife and little daughter in Auschwitz.
… (plus d'informations)
1 voter
Signalé
meggyweg | 2 autres critiques | Feb 11, 2011 |

Listes

Statistiques

Œuvres
1
Membres
94
Popularité
#199,202
Évaluation
4.1
Critiques
3
ISBN
10
Langues
2
Favoris
1

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