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Is there still room for another book about and by another Auschwitz survivor? [View All]

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Up2Late Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-28-07 06:18 AM
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Is there still room for another book about and by another Auschwitz survivor?
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I just started reading (and am thinking about editing and publishing) my Grand-Aunt's (my Grand-mother's Sister) unpublished book about her arrest in Southern France by the Gestapo in October 1943, her imprisonment, and eventual liberation from the Death camp at Auschwitz-Berkinow, so I guess my question is, would anyone want to read still another, yet to be published book on this subject?

I know several similar account of these events have been published over the last 10-15 years or so, and even a few more that were written by other female Auschwitz survivors who were also in the French Resistance, but my Grand-Aunt's book, though not yet in final, ready to publish form, has a few unique aspects to it, as far as I can tell.

First, she was probably the only, or at least one of the few, French Resistance fighters who was also an American and Jewish, to have been imprisoned and survived Auschwitz-Berkinow. Now, to be clear, I'm not saying that she was a French/Jewish woman, who couldn't leave France ahead of the German Army (or even after they occupied the country), and then later became an American after the War when she came to this county, what I'm saying is that she was a Dual Citizen of both the United States of America and France before, during and after the War. This was due to the fact that her Father (my Great-Grand Father) was an American, (having been born in Columbus, Georgia) and she, like my Grand-Mother and my Father, was born in France.

Also, though not extremely wealthy, she was from a "black sheep" branch of a wealthy, well known, Jewish family, and even self-describes herself as coming from a "privileged childhood," so she did have the means to leave France ahead of the German Army, similar to the way my Grand Parents and Father did in 1939, but she chose to stay and do what she could to help save France. She was also forced to work at some of the sorting and collection points near Paris and Drancy and then eventually to Berkinow, where she was forced to work at the sorting warehouses there, the place that became know inside the camp as "Canada."

After she was eventually liberated in January 1944, she eventually settled in Santa Barbara, California, a place that is almost amazingly similar to her small town in Southern France in the area that most Americans call "The French Riviera." She lived in California until her death in 1973.

Thankfully, I finally convinced my Father, after our first trip to Southern France (and his first trip back there in 59 years) that he needed to seek help for the his war related anxiety that had troubled him since he was a child. He now is taking anti-anxiety medication and has actually returned 4 or 5 more times to his (and his Aunt's and Grand-Father's) French Riviera town since then. I've been there 2 more times too, and just about every place that she writes about in this book, having just returned from a trip, last week, to Germany, Auschwitz-Berkinow in Poland, and Czech Republic. This was my Fathers second trip back to Auschwitz-Berkinow since 2005, when he went there on a tour bus, but wasn't able to see what felt he needed to see.

This time, we went and found the Block house my Grand-Aunt was housed in, and I actually found and took home a piece of brick that had flaked off of her block house. We also made it down to the end of the Rail Road platform, to where the Memorial was built at the camp, and we even went to the Holocaust Memorial in East Berlin too. I took a lot of pictures, so when I get my film developed next week, I'll be sure to post a few pictures.

I can't even begin to describe how big or how spooky that place is, it's something you just need to experience for yourself to truly understand the scale of it and the enormous amount of evil that took place there. We were there on a cold, grey and very windy day, it seemed very appropriate for that place.

So, having said all that, back to my question. Would another story of surviving Auschwitz-Berkinow be greeted with groans of "...enough already...," or do you think that if I have the ability and the means (which I think I do now since the rise of Internet or "Do-it-Yourself" Publishing) I should try to edit and publish my late Great-Aunt's book and/or screenplay?
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