The Jews have a deep sense of dignity which no...

  • YES
  • The Jews have a deep sense of dignity which no pain and no suffering could undermine. As a proof to this theory the author quotes a scene that took place shortly before the ghetto came into existence. He and his friend were walking along Marszalkowska Street, both wearing armbands. Suddenly they found themselves face to face with two German boys from some Nazi organization. They started shouting at the Jews to take of their hats to them. Both boys were holding crops. The author and his friend took their caps off, when suddenly they sensed that the boys feel helpless as if they understood that no crop in the world could subjugate the Jews spirit. The boys turned on their heels and went off.

  • 1940-00-00
  • 1940-00-00
  • before formation of the ghetto
  • private life / daily life
  • atmosphere, youth, Germans, Jews
  • Written between 1952 and 1954, the book is a key work documenting the Warsaw ghetto from its inception to its final days.
    How did life continue in the Warsaw ghetto? What organizations took - or should have taken - care of its inhabitants? How did so many survive in such terrible isolation? In answering those questions Michel Mazor details the vanishing of a city.
    The book is a study of the social and political life of the Warsaw ghetto.

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  • Related people:

    • Mazor Michel

      He was born in Kiev of jewish parents. After studying law, he left Russia at the outbreak of the civil war and moved...

    • Kolega Mazora / Mazor's firend Unknown

      He was walking along the street when two German boys attacked them. They bullied them and flung insults at them.

    • Niemieccy chłopcy Unknown

      Boys aged 15-16, from a Nazi organization. They attacked the author and his Jewish friend on the street.