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And Peace Never Came
by Elisabeth M. Raab
“It is Easter Sunday, April 1945, early in the morning, maybe
just dawn. We stand still, like frozen grey statues. Us. Seven hundred
and thirty women, wrapped in wet, grey, threadbare blankets, standing
in the rain. Our blankets hang over our heads, drape down to the soil.
We hold them closed with our hands from the inside, leaving only a
small opening to peer out, so that we save the precious warmth of
our breath.” (from Chapter 5)
So begins the author’s sojourn, her search for freedom that begins
with the chaotic barrenness in which she found herself after her liberation
on Easter Sunday, April 1945, and takes her across several continents
and half a lifetime.
Raab paints a brief yet moving picture of her idyllic life before
her internment and the shock and the horrors of Auschwitz, but it
is in the images of life after her liberation, that Raab imparts her
most poignant story — a story told in a clear, almost sparse,
always honest style, a story of the brutal, and, at times, the beautiful
facts of human nature.
This book will appeal to a number of audiences — to readers
interested in human nature under the most trying circumstances, to
historians of World War II or Jewish history, to veterans and their
families who lived through World War II, and to those interested in
politics and the evils of political extremism.
Shortlisted for the 1998 Edna Staebler Award for Creative Non-fiction.
Winner of the 1999 Jewish Book Committee award for best Holocaust
memoir.
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