Postcards to a Little Boy: A Kindertransport Story

Henry Foner (Heinz Lichtwitz)

NIS 156.00
NIS 93.60

As the situation for the Jews in Europe worsened, plans were set in motion to rescue and find refuge for as many children as possible, and thus the Kindertransport program was born. The children were accompanied on their journey by caregivers, social workers, and educators, and placed with families or in other settings in the United Kingdom. Henry Foner, who had lost his mother at a young age, was one of approximately 10,000 children who left Europe between December 1938 and September 1939 thanks to this program. Henry was sent from Berlin to Wales and lived there with Morris and Winifred Foner, a Jewish couple, who provided him with a warm, loving home. From the moment they parted, Max Lichtwitz, Henry’s father, regularly sent him colorful illustrated postcards written in German. On Henry’s seventh birthday, Max telephoned him from Berlin, but Henry had already forgotten all his German, and from that time on all postcards were written in English. Henry’s foster mother, Aunty Winnie, arranged in an album the postcards and letters that Henry received from his father and other relatives and friends. Max Lichtwitz, who had the courage and foresight to part from his only child and thereby save his life, was deported to Auschwitz on December 9, 1942 and was murdered a week later. Henry and his family moved to Israel in 1968 and made their home in Jerusalem. Postcards to a Little Boy is an authentic, moving document that presents scans of the original postcards and letters with their translations, along with an historical afterword on the Kindertransport.

 

As the situation for the Jews in Europe worsened, plans were set in motion to rescue and find refuge for as many children as possible, and thus the Kindertransport program was born. The children were accompanied on their journey by caregivers, social workers, and educators, and placed with families or in other settings in the United Kingdom. Henry Foner, who had lost his mother at a young age, was one of approximately 10,000 children who left Europe between December 1938 and September 1939 thanks to this program. Henry was sent from Berlin to Wales and lived there with Morris and Winifred Foner, a Jewish couple, who provided him with a warm, loving home. From the moment they parted, Max Lichtwitz, Henry’s father, regularly sent him colorful illustrated postcards written in German. On Henry’s seventh birthday, Max telephoned him from Berlin, but Henry had already forgotten all his German, and from that time on all postcards were written in English. Henry’s foster mother, Aunty Winnie, arranged in an album the postcards and letters that Henry received from his father and other relatives and friends. Max Lichtwitz, who had the courage and foresight to part from his only child and thereby save his life, was deported to Auschwitz on December 9, 1942 and was murdered a week later. Henry and his family moved to Israel in 1968 and made their home in Jerusalem. Postcards to a Little Boy is an authentic, moving document that presents scans of the original postcards and letters with their translations, along with an historical afterword on the Kindertransport.

 

מפרט המוצר
Year 2013
ISBN 978-965-308-436-0
Catalog No. 832
No. of Pages 124 pp.
Size 23X25 cm.
Format Hard Cover
Publisher Yad Vashem
Translator
גולשים שקנו מוצר זה קנו גם

Written in a Barn: The Diary of a Young Woman from Vilna

Ruth Leimenzon Engles| Edited by Ben-Tsiyon Klibansky

 

At last, I have gotten a notebook in which to write. I have a pencil. I will try. Maybe it will make it easier to push through the days. It’s hard for me. As soon as dawn breaks, my first thought is: how does one endure until the end of the day.
Ruth Leimenzon Engles, May 15, 1944

A few days after the Germans occupied Vilna at the end of June 1941, Ruth Leimenzon’s husband was seized by local collaborators and was never seen again. Ruth, the sole survivor of her murdered family, managed to survive two years in the ghetto using her intelligence and common sense, helped by luck and perhaps miracles. Just two days before the ghetto’s liquidation in September 1943, Ruth escaped with the help of a Christian woman, her former boss’ wife, and found a hiding place in a barn on a farm 20 kilometers from Vilna, where she hid for nearly a year. During the last two months in the barn, Ruth wrote a diary in Yiddish describing her three-year ordeal.

NIS 104.00 NIS 62.40

To Bear Witness: Holocaust Remembrance at Yad Vashem

Editors: Bella Gutterman and Avner Shalev

NIS 234.00 NIS 140.40

Through Our Eyes - Children Witness the Holocaust

Ages 12-14 Language: English

 

Book

NIS 78.00 NIS 46.80
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