Survival in the Forest: The Świrz Camp

Isidore Karten

NIS 91.00

“I was born in the midst of World War I on November 11, 1914, in the carriage of a train, someplace in Hungary.” Thus begins Isidore Karten’s fascinating life story, from an idyllic Shtetl childhood in Swirz, Eastern Galicia, through the hardship of the Soviet occupation, and the German troops marching into town in July 1941. The Germans established the ghetto in Bobrka, and in December 1942, the remainder of the local Jews were ordered into the ghetto. Isidore and his brother made the difficult decision to leave their family behind and joined the Jewish partisans in the Swirz Forest. Isidore spent time going from ghetto to ghetto, calling upon young people to come to the forest to fight. It was on a visit to the Bobrka ghetto that he met his wife to be, Julia, who finally decided to escape to the forest and join the partisans. Isidore and Julia were married in the forest. Two witnesses signed the Ketubah and he gave her a ring, which Julia kept for the next 47 years.

 

“I was born in the midst of World War I on November 11, 1914, in the carriage of a train, someplace in Hungary.” Thus begins Isidore Karten’s fascinating life story, from an idyllic Shtetl childhood in Swirz, Eastern Galicia, through the hardship of the Soviet occupation, and the German troops marching into town in July 1941. The Germans established the ghetto in Bobrka, and in December 1942, the remainder of the local Jews were ordered into the ghetto. Isidore and his brother made the difficult decision to leave their family behind and joined the Jewish partisans in the Swirz Forest. Isidore spent time going from ghetto to ghetto, calling upon young people to come to the forest to fight. It was on a visit to the Bobrka ghetto that he met his wife to be, Julia, who finally decided to escape to the forest and join the partisans. Isidore and Julia were married in the forest. Two witnesses signed the Ketubah and he gave her a ring, which Julia kept for the next 47 years.

 

מפרט המוצר
Year 2013
ISBN 978-965-308-440-7
Catalog No. 836
No. of Pages 120 pp.
Size 16X24 cm.
Format Hard Cover
Publisher Yad Vashem
Translator
תגיות מוצר
גולשים שקנו מוצר זה קנו גם

Letters Never Sent: Amsterdam, Westerbork, Bergen-Belsen

Mirjam Bolle

 

In early 1943, Mirjam Levie, a young Jewish woman from Amsterdam, began to write letters to her fiance, Leo Bolle, who had immigrated to Eretz Israel a few years earlier. Her letters, which were never sent, were written during the deportations of the Jews from Amsterdam; during her incarceration in Westerbork, the main transit camp for Jewish deportees to the death camps in Poland; and during her imprisonment in Bergen-Belsen. As secretary in the controversial “Jewish Council of Amsterdam”, Mirjam’s letters are the only source remaining to describe events from the viewpoint of one of its members. Mirjam managed to hide the letters she wrote in Amsterdam and Westerbork; and those she wrote in Bergen-Belsen she brought with her when she was released as part of an exchange between Dutch Jews and German POWs, and arrived in Eretz Israel on 10 July 1944. The book presents a series of letters – unique in their historical interest and extremely moving in their human dimension – forming a personal diary of real time.

 

NIS 91.00 NIS 78.00
Close