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4+ oeuvres 76 utilisateurs 2 critiques 2 Favoris

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Notice de désambiguation :

(yid) VIAF:5846292

Crédit image: Moshé Flincker en première de couverture lors d'une publication israélienne de son journal

Œuvres de Moshe Flinker

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Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Flinker, Moshe
Nom légal
Flinker, Moses Zeeb ben Eliezer Noah
Autres noms
Flinker, Moishe
Flinker, Maurice Wolf
פלינקר, משה זאב בן אליעזר נח (Hébreu)
Pliynqer, Mošeh ben ʾEliyʿezer Noaḥ (Translit.-ISO hébreu)
Flinker, Wolf Mozes
Date de naissance
1926-10-09
Date de décès
1944-05-21
Lieu de sépulture
Auschwitz Concentration Camp, Poland
Sexe
male
Nationalité
Pays-Bas
Lieu de naissance
La Hague, Pays-Bas
Lieu du décès
Auschwitz, Pologne
Cause du décès
Assassinat (Shoah)
Lieux de résidence
La Hague, Pays-Bas
Bruxelles, Belgique
Professions
Etudiant
Relations
Flinker, David (Oncle)
Courte biographie
Moshe Ze'ev Flinker was born in The Hague, Netherlands, one of seven children in a wealthy Orthodox Jewish family of Polish origins. In 1942, to escape the Nazi Occupation of Holland in World War II, the Flinkers fled to Belgium and lived in hiding under false identities. Moshe was deeply religious and a gifted linguist who learned eight languages. He planned to move to Palestine and become a diplomat, and studied Arabic for this purpose. He kept a diary while in hiding from 1941 to 1943. The Flinker family was betrayed in 1944 and many of them were caught and sent to the Nazi death camp at Auschwitz. His mother Mindel was murdered on arrival. Moshe and his father Eliezer spent several months in the camp before being transferred to Echterdingen forced labor camp, where they both contracted typhus. From there, they were sent to Bergen- Belsen, where they both died. Moshe was 18 years old. His younger brother and five sisters survived the war, and arranged for Yad Vashem to publish his diary in Hebrew in 1958. In 1965, it was published in English as Young Moshe's Diary: The Spiritual Torment of a Jewish Boy in Nazi Europe.
Notice de désambigüisation
VIAF:5846292

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Discussions

Critiques

Privately published by Yad Vashem. This is the second English printing, 1971
 
Signalé
AdasYoshuron | 1 autre critique | Dec 28, 2019 |
The 1942 - 1943 diary of a sixteen-year-old Dutch Jew living in Belgium, who eventually died in Auschwitz. He and his parents and six siblings were hiding with false papers in Brussels. I'm a bit confused about this, actually. Apparently they were posing as Gentiles, yet Moshe writes about borrowing Hebrew books and religious books from the library, and about associating with other Jews including a shochet and so on, which makes me wonder just how hard they were trying to pass. Yet pass they did, for a couple of years, until the entire family was betrayed and arrested in 1944.

This is an intensely religious chronicle; Moshe was a pious boy who spent a lot of time pondering how the sufferings of his fellow Jews fit into God's plan of the universe. Not knowing much about Judaism (and being an atheist at that), I couldn't really get into it. Nevertheless it is a valuable addition to the small number of Holocaust diaries out there.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
meggyweg | 1 autre critique | Apr 14, 2009 |

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Geoffrey Wigoder Introduction
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Saul ESH Introduction
Nathan Weinstock Présentation
Guy-Alain Sitbon Traducteur et annotateur
Hélène Sobel Traduction de la préface

Statistiques

Œuvres
4
Aussi par
1
Membres
76
Popularité
#233,522
Évaluation
½ 3.5
Critiques
2
ISBN
6
Langues
4
Favoris
2

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