Say the Name: A Survivor's Tale in Prose and Poetry

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UNM Press, 2005 - Biography & Autobiography - 170 pages

Say the Name vividly describes in the voice of a fourteen-year-old the experiences of a Jewish girl who was imprisoned in Ravensbruck Concentration Camp during World War II. Miraculously, Judita Sternova of Kurima, Czechoslovakia, survives persecutions, hiding, flight, capture, deportation, and the Camp. Like the few other surviving Jews, she could not bear to remain in her village emptied of family and other Jews and emigrates to England and, eventually, the United States. After more than fifty years Sherman gets up from her years of memories, private resistance, and public silence to write this book. She is triggered to do so upon hearing a lecture by Professor Carrasco at Princeton on "Religion and the Terror of History."

The narrative is interspersed with Sherman's powerful poems that grab the reader's attention. Poignant original drawings made secretly by imprisoned women of Ravensbruck, at risk of their lives, illuminate the text. Sherman courageously bears witness to the terror of man and simultaneously challenges God for answers.

This book should "jolt us into remembrance, warning, and action."

 

Contents

CHAPTER TWO
21
CHAPTER THREE
35
CHAPTER FOUR
51
CHAPTER SIX
93
CHAPTER SEVEN
125
CHAPTER NINE
141
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About the author (2005)

Judith H. Sherman lives in New Jersey.

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