How My Grandfather Stole a Shoe (And Survived the Holocaust in Ukraine)

Author:   Julie Masis ,  Felix Lembersky
Publisher:   Academic Studies Press
ISBN:  

9798887197104


Pages:   200
Publication Date:   24 July 2025
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

Our Price $32.99 Quantity:  
Add to Cart

Share |

How My Grandfather Stole a Shoe (And Survived the Holocaust in Ukraine)


Add your own review!

Overview

During World War II, approximately 10,000 Moldovan Jews were imprisoned in the Obodovka ghetto, located in the Romanian-occupied part of Ukraine. Unlike the areas under German control where Jews faced systematic extermination, survival rates were marginally higher under Romanian occupation, as soldiers there did not pursue mass executions with bullets. Despite this, most of the ghetto's inhabitants succumbed to starvation and disease during the harsh first winter.Journalist Julie Masis captures this lesser-known chapter of the Holocaust through the memories of her grandfatherShlomo Masis, a survivor who lived to the remarkable age of 102. His recollections reveal stories of resilience, including how some Ukrainians aided the Jews in the ghetto. Masis also delves into a poignant family legend about a German medic who reportedly fell in love with her Jewish grandmother. This narrative sheds light on both the horrors and the unexpected human connections that emerged during one of history's darkest periods.

Full Product Details

Author:   Julie Masis ,  Felix Lembersky
Publisher:   Academic Studies Press
Imprint:   Cherry Orchard Books
ISBN:  

9798887197104


Pages:   200
Publication Date:   24 July 2025
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

Table of Contents

One hundred candles Introduction   PART ONE: GRANDPA How the war started The rug that hung on the wall Thrown out of a moving train The Zguritsa pogrom The fruit trees that grew along the roads How my grandfather stole a shoe The bird that wanted to be free How the youngest brother died The airport and the hospital The selection Villages at dusk The frozen bodies The Nazi who rode a motorcycle Why did Haim come back? The unlucky wedding Barefoot in the snow Grandpa wants to go outside Two buckets of potatoes and a broken bottle If they didn’t have bread, they gave potatoes Adam and Eve How Grandpa saved his brother Forced labor How curiosity saved Grandpa The collective farm Not like Schindler How I wore Grandpa’s sweatpants The partisans who dressed up as Nazis Visitors at the nursing home The soldiers with feathers Never too old to dance How Grandpa milled grain Have a good year   PART TWO: GRANDMA From Romania to the Soviet Union The ticket to America The uncle who sold bagels Ten years for telling a joke The truck that came too late Expelled from Soroca Vertujani The frostbitten feet The German wallet A conversation The stolen bread The fake email Retaliation An unexpected meeting A love story in the ghetto? Did Grandpa know? The Red Cross How Tsilia met Shlomo The couple who got married in the ghetto How the ghetto was liberated Romania’s responsibility How my grandparents got married The bag that took the train How Grandpa killed two Nazis How the war ended The drive home   PART THREE: GRANDDAUGHTER How I was named         Odessa—“Keep moving, you are not a tree!” On the road to Moldova A visit to Zguritsa Zguritsa before the war The cow in the cemetery The Roma capital of the world Chisinau, the capital of Moldova The trip to Obodovka A Ukrainian classmate The righteous among the nations Back in Odessa Chisinau in December Kyiv, the capital of Ukraine The synagogue of Orhei Jewish prayers are closer to God’s ears Crosses as Holocaust monuments Holocaust Street Chisinau in the summer   PART FOUR: AFTER THE WAR The famine of 1947 How a poor man visited a rich man Potato diplomacy The free cookies Without his grandparents How the horse died Yahrzeit Childhood games The Blue Suit Showing disrespect The horse-pulled sleigh Antisemitism The man who wanted to make my father blind The only man in Zguritsa who had a car How a tobacco factory cured Grandpa The antenna The most important thing in life The matchmaker Grandma’s letters How my father got arrested in the cinema How my father sent butter in the mail The hospital on the way to America How we came to America How Grandpa got lost Grandpa’s trip to Israel Why Grandpa didn’t learn to drive Why Grandpa didn’t remarry Grandpa’s sunglasses The upcoming birthday How to communicate without words The interview The great-grandfather who had one leg One hundred and a half Language Grandpa’s lost address book Romanian citizenship Ancestors at a dinner party     Acknowledgements

Reviews

“Although an extensive literature exists on the Nazi death camps and Einsatzgruppen massacres in Eastern Europe, much less well-known is how the Holocaust unfolded in the Romanian-administered Transnistria Governate established in German-occupied Soviet Ukraine. Julie Masis has written a very readable account that seamlessly weaves together the horrific but surprisingly inspiring experiences of her deported Moldovan Jewish family members supplemented with details that she gathered from archival sources and on research trips to the region. In the process of making sense of fragmentary stories while marveling how her paternal grandparents managed to survive the war when thousands of fellow Jews perished from hunger, exploitation, and exposure, she has created a memorable narrative that is at once intimate and remarkably unsentimental—capturing how instances of barbaric cruelty, as well as unexpected acts of kindness, often made the difference between life and death.”  — Jars Balan, Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies, University of Alberta An unforgettable, beautifully written memoir. With the eye of an artist and precision of a seasoned journalist, Julie Masis takes us into Ukraine and Moldova under Romanian occupation during World War II. At the center of the story is her grandfather, Shlomo Masis, who as a young man survived the horrors of the Jewish ghetto and saved others with his courage, kindness, and grit. He lived to 102 to tell the story to his granddaughter. The book is an invaluable addition to Holocaust literature, shedding light on little-known events in Eastern Europe. Yet the book is much more than a historical record. It is about the creation of oral history and its transfer from one generation to the next: the gift of sharing and the art of listening. Julie Masis weaves her grandfather’s stories into a nuanced, layered, sensitive interpretation, informed by her bilingual, bicultural background and her remarkable talent to speak from the heart. Family photos and the images by Soviet artist Felix Lembersky add a rich context to the narrative. This outstanding book will reverberate for years to come  — Yelena Lembersky, author of Like a Drop of Ink in a Downpour  “A poignant and unexpected journey through memory and survival, Julie Masis's remarkable book unravels a deeply personal family narrative that transcends the typical Holocaust memoir. With delicate prose and remarkable honesty, Masis offers a rare and invaluable local Bessarabian perspective—a lens seldom explored in Holocaust literature—revealing the unique experiences of Jewish communities in this often-overlooked region. The book transforms her grandfather's extraordinary story of survival, centered around a single stolen shoe, into a profound meditation on resilience, human dignity, and the small, sometimes absurd moments of hope that punctuate human suffering. This intimate family story is both heartbreaking and unexpectedly humorous, providing readers with a nuanced, localized understanding of survival and remembrance that enriches our broader historical comprehension.” — Irina ȘIHOVA, PhD Jewish History Museum of the Republic of Moldova, Director


Author Information

Julie Masis is the editor and publisher of the Russian Boston Gazette, a newspaper for Russian-speaking immigrants in Boston. She is also a freelance journalist who has written extensively about Jewish history. Her stories have been published in the Times of Israel, Jerusalem Post, Boston Globe, Christian Science Monitor, Montreal Gazette, The Globe and Mail, and in other newspapers and magazines. Other than journalism, she has also taught English to Buddhist monks in Cambodia, organized tours to the Khmer Rouge tribunal, and is currently learning to ice-skate.

Tab Content 6

Author Website:  

Customer Reviews

Recent Reviews

No review item found!

Add your own review!

Countries Available

All regions
Latest Reading Guide

RGJUNE2025

 

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty
Shopping cart
Mailing List