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Jewish Women of Ravensbruck Concentration Camp

English · Hardback

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Informationen zum Autor Rochelle Saidel is founder and executive director of the Remember the Women Institute in New York and senior scientific researcher at the Center for the Study of Women and Gender at the University of São Paulo. She is author of Never Too Late to Remember: The Politics behind New York City's Holocaust Museum and The Outraged Conscience: Seekers of Justice for Nazi War Criminals in America . Klappentext Ravensbruck was the only major Nazi concentration camp for women. Located about fifty miles north of Berlin, the camp was the site of murder by slave labor, torture, starvation, shooting, lethal injection, "medical" experimentation, and gassing.While this camp was designed to hold 5,000 women, the actual figure was six times this number. Between 1939 and 1945, 132,000 women from twenty-three countries were imprisoned in Ravensbruck, including political prisoners, Jehovah's Witnesses, "asocials" (including Gypsies, prostitutes, and lesbians), criminals, and Jewish women (who made up about 20 percent of the population). Only 15,000 survived.Drawing upon more than sixty narratives and interviews of survivors in the United States, Israel, and Europe as well as unpublished testimonies, documents, and photographs from private archives, Rochelle Saidel provides a vivid collective and individual portrait of Ravensbruck s Jewish women prisoners. She worked for over twenty years to track down these women whose poignant testimonies deserve to be shared with a wider audience and future generations. Their memoirs provide new perspectives and information about satellite camps (there were about 70 slave labor sub-camps). Here is the story of real daily camp life with the women s thoughts about food, friendships, fear of rape and sexual abuse, hygiene issues, punishment, work, and resistance. Saidel includes accounts of the women's treatment, their daily struggles to survive, their hopes and fears, their friendships, their survival strategies, and the aftermath.On April 30, 1945, the Soviet Army liberated Ravensbruck. They found only 3,000 extremely ill women in the camp, because the Nazis had sent other remaining women on a death march. The "Jewish Women of Ravensbruck Concentration Camp" reclaims the lost voices of the victims and restores the personal accounts of the survivors."...

Product details

Authors Rochelle G Saidel, Rochelle G. Saidel
Publisher The University of Wisconsin Press
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 30.04.2004
 
EAN 9780299198602
ISBN 978-0-299-19860-2
No. of pages 336
Dimensions 159 mm x 229 mm x 32 mm
Subject Humanities, art, music > History > 20th century (up to 1945)

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