Survival Artist
A Memoir of the Holocaust
$19.99
In stock
About the Book
This vividly detailed memoir describes the experiences of a Holocaust survivor who narrowly escaped death by living a childhood of constant vigil and, along with his family, continuously dodging the ever-present threat of a Nazi capture.
After the Nazi invasion of Poland, the Bergman family’s hometown became an increasingly dangerous city in which to live, as evidenced by the author’s account of being struck deaf by the butt of a German soldier’s rifle while playing in the street with other children. Though traumatic and certainly life-threatening, this vicious attack would ultimately save his life several times. The story continues with vivid accounts of the family’s narrow escapes to (and from) the Lodz, Warsaw, and Czestochowa ghettos, describing some of the more horrific vignettes of life in the Jewish ghetto and detailing how some members of the family survived through a fortuitous combination of luck, skilled deception, and an underlying will to live.
About the Author(s)
Bibliographic Details
Eugene Bergman
Format: softcover (6 x 9)
Pages: 204
Bibliographic Info: 14 photos, notes, bibliography, index
Copyright Date: 2009
pISBN: 978-0-7864-4134-1
eISBN: 978-0-7864-5398-6
Imprint: McFarland
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments vii
Foreword by Leon W. Wells 1
Introduction 3
I. The End of an Idyll
A Foray into History 11
Growing Up in Poznan 15
The Germans Arrive 30
Escape to Lodz, Escape from Lodz 38
II. Life in the Warsaw Ghetto
From One Ghetto to Another 42
The German Professor 53
My Father the Smuggler 56
The Real and Unreal Worlds 60
Vignettes 64
The Siege and the Escape 72
III. Dodging the Predators
Rescued by Dadek 82
Fobbing Off the Landlord 101
Mysteries of Mimicry 104
The Ghetto Revolts 113
Forays from the Kitchen into the Jungle 117
IV. From the Uprising to Liberation
Saved from Drowning and Shooting 130
Inside Insurgent Warsaw 136
I Become a Prisoner of War 142
My Life Among the Punks 148
The Liberation Comes 162
Afterword 179
Chapter Notes 189
Bibliography 191
Index 193
Book Reviews & Awards
- “Should be in all libraries [with collections about the Holocaust]…Bergman’s family lived for a time in the ‘Aryan’ section of Warsaw, his survival dependent upon the black market to earn a living. Of particular interest is Bergman’s account of walking among the [Aryan] population and the fear this engendered in him”—Library Journal
- “Engrossing memoir”—Washington Jewish Week.