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The quotation comes from the 87 year old Blanche Major from Oslo. In Female Time Witnesses. Stories from the Holocaust, Major and nine other Jewish women talk about their horrifying experiences from Auschwitz, Theresienstadt, Bergen-Belsen and other Nazi concentration camps.Surrounded by soldiers, dogs and electric fences, the young girls had one goal in common: to survive. In this book they tell…
The quotation comes from the 87 year old Blanche Major from Oslo. In Female Time Witnesses. Stories from the Holocaust, Major and nine other Jewish women talk about their horrifying experiences from Auschwitz, Theresienstadt, Bergen-Belsen and other Nazi concentration camps.Surrounded by soldiers, dogs and electric fences, the young girls had one goal in common: to survive. In this book they tell about the humiliation, hunger and despair they experienced. But here are also stories of dignity, solidarity and hope. Each fate is unique, but taken together they display an unbreakable will to live and an astonishing lack of bitter feelings.Female Time Witnesses is a book that tells the story about what happened and what must never happen again. Foreign sales:China, Shanghai Joint Publishing Company LimitedDenmark, Kristeligt Dagblads forlagThe Netherlands, Het SpectrumUK, Fledgling Press (World English Rights) Critical acclaim:From Morgenbladet, November 8-14 2013"An eye for the individual. One feature that appears in almost all these stories, and which makes one of the greatest impressions on the reader, are the accounts of how they were transported to the camps in overcrowded cattle wagons. This is also very efficiently described by Hungarian Nobel Prize winner Imre Kertész, whose novels to some extent read as time witness reports. One important aspect of the book has obviously been to demonstrate that these time witnesses were highly different as individuals, and that their post-war lives also differ widely. A witness is someone who has observed an event, and the same is true of a time witness, but the latter has also been subject to experiences of three different categories: dehumanization, loss of identity and evil. Treating individuals as identical just because they have experienced the Holocaust, isn’t exactly tantamount to dehumanization, but it does reduce all the survivors to victims. No person is merely a victim – and that is the subtext of practically every page in this book. Therefore it has been a matter of importance to emphasise the differences between these ten women and also to show what else they have done in their lives. The stories of these women, and the sober way they are penned by Jakob Lothe, constitute an important, attitude-forming piece of work."Written by Espen Søbye From AFTENPOSTEN MORNING EDITION, January 9 2014"The dust cover alone is enough to make a strong impression. It consists of pictures of the ten women when they were young and how they look today. Seeing their eyes is sufficient to make you speculate on what they have experienced. These eyes have witnessed so many things that most of us struggle to grasp the reality of — some of the most atrocious things people can subject their fellow human beings to. These eyes have seen things no one should have to see. These are eyes that belong to ten women who demonstrate great courage in telling their stories, and who live on — despite all the evil and suffering they have been witness to."Written by Regine Folkman Rossnes (21)
Ebok 149,-

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Undertittel fortellinger fra Holocaust
Forfattere Jakob Lothe (illustratør), Jakob Lothe (redaktør), Agnete Brun (illustratør), Steve Nelson (illustratør)
Forlag Gyldendal
Utgitt 21.10.2013
Lengde 247 sider
Sjanger Historie, Dokumentar og fakta
Språk Bokmål
Format epub
DRM-beskyttelse Vannmerket
ISBN 9788205457072

The quotation comes from the 87 year old Blanche Major from Oslo. In Female Time Witnesses. Stories from the Holocaust, Major and nine other Jewish women talk about their horrifying experiences from Auschwitz, Theresienstadt, Bergen-Belsen and other Nazi concentration camps.

Surrounded by soldiers, dogs and electric fences, the young girls had one goal in common: to survive. In this book they tell about the humiliation, hunger and despair they experienced. But here are also stories of dignity, solidarity and hope. Each fate is unique, but taken together they display an unbreakable will to live and an astonishing lack of bitter feelings.

Female Time Witnesses is a book that tells the story about what happened and what must never happen again.

Foreign sales:
China, Shanghai Joint Publishing Company Limited
Denmark, Kristeligt Dagblads forlag
The Netherlands, Het Spectrum
UK, Fledgling Press (World English Rights)

Critical acclaim:
From Morgenbladet, November 8-14 2013
"An eye for the individual. One feature that appears in almost all these stories, and which makes one of the greatest impressions on the reader, are the accounts of how they were transported to the camps in overcrowded cattle wagons. This is also very efficiently described by Hungarian Nobel Prize winner Imre Kertész, whose novels to some extent read as time witness reports. One important aspect of the book has obviously been to demonstrate that these time witnesses were highly different as individuals, and that their post-war lives also differ widely.

A witness is someone who has observed an event, and the same is true of a time witness, but the latter has also been subject to experiences of three different categories: dehumanization, loss of identity and evil. Treating individuals as identical just because they have experienced the Holocaust, isn’t exactly tantamount to dehumanization, but it does reduce all the survivors to victims. No person is merely a victim – and that is the subtext of practically every page in this book. Therefore it has been a matter of importance to emphasise the differences between these ten women and also to show what else they have done in their lives. The stories of these women, and the sober way they are penned by Jakob Lothe, constitute an important, attitude-forming piece of work."
Written by Espen Søbye

From AFTENPOSTEN MORNING EDITION, January 9 2014
"The dust cover alone is enough to make a strong impression. It consists of pictures of the ten women when they were young and how they look today. Seeing their eyes is sufficient to make you speculate on what they have experienced. These eyes have witnessed so many things that most of us struggle to grasp the reality of — some of the most atrocious things people can subject their fellow human beings to. These eyes have seen things no one should have to see. These are eyes that belong to ten women who demonstrate great courage in telling their stories, and who live on — despite all the evil and suffering they have been witness to."
Written by Regine Folkman Rossnes (21)

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