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"In the evening I had to prepare food and cook supper, which exhausted me totally. In politics there's absolutely nothing new. Again, out of impatience I feel myself beginning to fall into melancholy. There is really no way out of this for us." This is Dawid Sierakowiak's final diary entry.
Soon after writing it, the young author died of tuberculosis, exhaustion, and starvation - the Holocaust syndrome known as "ghetto disease." After the liberation of the Lodz Ghetto, his notebooks were found stacked on a cookstove, ready to be burned for heat. Young Sierakowiak was one of more than 60,000 Jews who perished in that notorious urban slave camp, a man-made hell which was the longest surviving concentration of Jews in Nazi Europe.
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The diary comprises a remarkable legacy left to humanity by its teenage author. It is one of the most fastidiously detailed accounts ever rendered of modern life in human bondage. Off mountain climbing and studying in southern Poland during the summer of 1939, Dawid begins his diary with a heady enthusiasm to experience life, learn languages, and read great literature. He returns home under the quickly gathering clouds of war.
Abruptly Lodz is occupied by the Nazis, and the Sierakowiak family is among the city's 200,000 Jews who are soon forced into a sealed ghetto, cut off from the outside world.
The wonder of the diary is that every bit of hardship yields wisdom from Dawid's remarkable intellect. Reading it, you become a prisoner with him in the ghetto, and with disconcerting intimacy you begin to experience the incredible process by which the vast majority of the Jews of Europe were annihilated in World War II. Significantly, the youth has no doubt about the consequence of deportation out of the ghetto: "Deportation into scrap metal," he calls it.
A committed communist and the unit leader of an underground organization, he crusades for more food for the ghetto's school children. But when invited to pledge his life to a suicide resistance squad, he writes that he cannot become a "professional revolutionary." He owes his strength and life to the care of his family.
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Previews available in: English
Subjects
Jews, Diaries, Ethnic relations, Persecutions, Personal narratives, Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945), Jews, biography, Jews, poland, Holocaust, jewish (1939-1945), personal narratives, Diariessierakowiak, dawid, Jews--persecutions, Jews--persecutions--poland--łódź, Holocaust, jewish (1939-1945)--personal narratives, Holocaust, jewish (1939-1945)--poland--łódź--personal narratives, Ds135.p62 l64434 1996, 000124219, 940.53/18People
Dawid SierakowiakPlaces
Łódź, Poland, Łódź (Poland)Showing 5 featured editions. View all 5 editions?
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1
Diary of Dawid Sierakowiak: Five Notebooks from the Lodz Ghetto
1998, Oxford University Press, Incorporated
in English
019531350X 9780195313505
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2
The Diary of Dawid Sierakowiak: Five Notebooks from the Lodz Ghetto
March 1, 1998, Oxford University Press
in English
0195122852 9780195122855
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3
Diary of Dawid Sierakowiak: Five Notebooks from the Lodz Ghetto
1996, Oxford University Press
in English
1280654945 9781280654947
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4
The diary of Dawid Sierakowiak: five notebooks from the Łódź ghetto
1996, Oxford University Press
in English
0195104501 9780195104509
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5
Diary of Dawid Sierakowiak: Five Notebooks from the Lodz Ghetto
1996, Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
in English
0747528195 9780747528197
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Book Details
First Sentence
"Only two months after their invasion of Poland on September 1, 1939, the Nazis began drawing up specific plans for the forced concentration in an urban slave camp of the vast Jewish population that had grown up in the city of Lodz."
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