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My Years in Theresienstadt
Gerty Spies | Jutta R. Tragnitz

My Years in Theresienstadt

How one woman survived the Holocaust

Prometheus Books (1997)
9781573921411
| Paperback
232 pages | 163 x 240 mm
$ 35.99 | Value: $ 13.99
Dewey 946.53/18/092
LC Classification D805.C9 .Z8813 1997
LC Control No. 97000271

Subject

  • Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)
  • Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)/ Czechoslovakia/ Personal Narratives
  • Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)/ Germany/ Personal Narratives
  • Jewish Authors
  • Jewish Authors/ Germany/ Biography

Plot

She has learned to forgive, but she can never forget. And neither can we.Gerty Spies was born in 1897 at Trier into a Jewish family whose ancestors had lived in Germany for centuries. Separated from her family by the Nazis, she was sent to the Czech camp known as Theresienstadt. It was a peculiar place: publicized as a retirement city, a Nazi propaganda showplace where Jews could sit out the war. But it was actually a way station for those destined for the Auschwitz death camp. Isolated from the outside world, surrounded by death, Spies retreated to her inner self to concentrate on human, cultural, and other values. Her powerful talent for writing, discovered at the camp, enabled her to transcend and triumph over mental and physical degradations; to keep her own integrity; to not let evil destroy her loving nature; and, finally, to not lose faith in humanity. By the end of the war, 33,000 people died in Theresienstadt from disease and malnutrition. Spies's work exhibits a tension between the expression of camp reality and an imagination of an idealized past. Sensitive and humorous, but never bitter, her stories of the struggle for survival are expressions of her own individual moral poise.