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OverviewThe diary of a young Jewish housewife who, together with her husband and five-month-old baby, fled the Warsaw ghetto at the last possible moment and survived the Holocaust hidden on the “Aryan” side of town in the loft of a run-down tinsmith’s shed. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Leokadia Schmidt , Oscar E SwanPublisher: Amsterdam Publishers Imprint: Amsterdam Publishers Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.70cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.785kg ISBN: 9789493056640ISBN 10: 9493056643 Pages: 420 Publication Date: 23 January 2019 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of Contents"Introduction History of the Translation PART I THE DESTRUCTION OF THE WARSAW GHETTO 1. The coming Event 2. Shop Frenzy 3. The Noose draws tighter 4. Roundups in full Swing 5. Goodbye to our Apartment 6. Temporarily at Flantzman's 7. Dysentery 8. Our new Apartment 9. ""Resettlement to the East"" 10. Hiding on the Grounds of the K. G. Schultz Factory 11. Jadzia's Brother's Family taken 12. Massacre in Otwock 13. The Trap springs shut 14. March to the Umschlagplatz 15. Night on the Umschlagplatz 16. Next Morning 17. The Miracle 18. Back in Jadzia's Apartment 19. Making Contact with the ""Aryan Side"" 20. My Husband's narrow Escape 21. The Ghetto completely sealed off 22. Miła Street 23. In the Ursus Workers' Quarters 24. Bedbugs, Rats, Extortion 25. Mr. Braun 26. The last Can of condensed Milk 27. Rosh Hashana, 1942 28. Escape from Miła Street 29. Back at my Sister's 30. Jula promises to help 31. Finding a Way out of the Ghetto 32. My first, failed Attempt 33. On the Aryan Side at last 34. My Husband follows PART II ON THE ARYAN SIDE. IN THE OLD TINSMITH'S SHED 35. Setting up Shop 36. My new Home and Neighbors 37. I commit Suicide 38. Zosia shows her true Colors 39. Mrs. Zieliński 40. Letters back and forth 41. Mrs. Zieliński disappoints 42. Christmas Holidays, 1942 43. New Year's, 1943. Reunion with my Husband 44. My Husband is denounced to the Police 45. I wake up screaming 46. At Mrs. Michalski's 47. New Blackmailers from the Będkowskis 48. Separate Lives in Hiding 49. My Husband is arrested 50. Ransoming my Husband 51. The Month of March 52. The Jewish Ghetto Uprising 53. My Ride across Town in a Trunk 54. Back in the old Tinsmith's Shop 55. Our Life in the Attic 56. May and the first Half of June, 1943 57.Ways Jews were discovered 58. Maniek detained and released 59. Maniek Caught with a Cache of Arms 60. In the Wake of Maniek's Arrest 61. Our new Cubby Hole 62. Mr. Michalski's Drinking Problem 63. News of Maniek's Execution 64. Preparing for the Uprising PART III THE WARSAW UPRISING OF 1944. EVACUATION AND LIBERATION 65. The Uprising breaks out 66. Rounded up by the Germans 67. The Detention Camp in Pruszków 68.Working on the Farm in Janków 69. Murderous Partisans 70. In the Ruins of Warsaw 71. Reuniting Zygmunt's Wife with Jurek and Waldek 72. My Husband located 73. My Husband's Story 74. Escape through the Sewers 75. My Husband's Story concluded: From Warsaw to Grodzisk 76. Out of Grodzisk 77. Smuggling Sugar in Milanówek 78. Arrested in Piaseczno 79. Imprisonment 80. Liberation Epilogue Afterword by Arthur Schmidt Photos"ReviewsObservational skill and judgmental honesty are among the fundamental values of Leokadia Schmidt's memoir of life both inside the Warsaw ghetto and hiding beyond its borders. It broadens our knowledge of social history during the period of the World War Two occupation and deepens our appreciation for the power of human hope and the enormous possibilities that can arise when the strength of familial bonds are combined with the will to live. - Wladyslaw Bartoszewski, Auschwitz survivor, resistance fighter, and historian of the Nazi occupation of Poland. Rescued from the Ashes is a witness report from the Jewish ghetto in Warsaw, in the time of World War Two. More specifically, it describes a period, when the Nazis destroyed the ghetto. The story begins on the 22nd of July 1942, the day when it became clear that residents of the ghetto would be deported. Of course, not the whole truth was told, namely that they would be deported to extermination camps. But, as we can read in the book, the average ghetto resident was well aware that the destination could never be good. Certain groups were initially exempt from deportations, including the family of Leokadia Schmidt. The family consisted of her husband, herself and their baby son. As a factory worker, Joseph Schmidt belonged to the part of the ghetto population that still was considered useful and therefore needed to stay. It was not easy to come to such a job, because, of course, everyone was after it. Joseph and Leokadia Schmidt, too, needed quite a lot of money and good connections, but they managed to achieve their intended purpose. In the meantime, the world around this family was rapidly getting smaller. In less than two months time between 250,000 and 300,000 people were deported to extermination camps. Schmidt could see how every day the next group of people to be deported was hunted down. In that period she kept a diary about it, which made the first part of the book. Eventually, the family managed to evade deportation and went into hiding elsewhere in the city. Schmidt kept up her diary all this time. She stopped journaling only when the uprising broke out in the Warsaw ghetto. After the war, the family left Europe for Venezuela in America. It was not until mid-sixties that Schmidt decided to continue where she had stopped in 1944, by also recording events after that time. It took several years before she got in touch with Oscar E. Swan, who translated the story from Polish to English. And then nothing was done for 45 years, until the oldest son of Schmidt knocked on Swan's door. The latter once again looked critically at his translation and provided it with notes, which resulted in the final book. It wasn't Schmidt's intention to publish her story as a book ever. She wanted to capture what she had seen and what she had been through, without pretensions about her qualities as a writer. Then again, it is not a book to finish in one session and it can take some time for a reader to get into the story. But it doesn't take away the fact, that Schmidt succeeded in her intention. With a big delay her story resulted into the book, that once again shows, what horrors occurred during the war in and around the Warsaw ghetto. - Traces of War.com Courage is definitely a major part of the human psyche but this diary also emphasizes compassion and how much caring for others in distress can really mean to others... Such a compelling diary and so glad that I purchased this for future reference. - Susan Roberts "Observational skill and judgmental honesty are among the fundamental values of Leokadia Schmidt's memoir of life both inside the Warsaw ghetto and hiding beyond its borders. It broadens our knowledge of social history during the period of the World War Two occupation and deepens our appreciation for the power of human hope and the enormous possibilities that can arise when the strength of familial bonds are combined with the will to live. -- Wladyslaw Bartoszewski, Auschwitz survivor, resistance fighter, and historian of the Nazi occupation of Poland. ""Rescued from the Ashes"" is a witness report from the Jewish ghetto in Warsaw, in the time of World War Two. More specifically, it describes a period, when the Nazis destroyed the ghetto. The story begins on the 22nd of July 1942, the day when it became clear that residents of the ghetto would be deported. Of course, not the whole truth was told, namely that they would be deported to extermination camps. But, as we can read in the book, the average ghetto resident was well aware that the destination could never be good. Certain groups were initially exempt from deportations, including the family of Leokadia Schmidt. The family consisted of her husband, herself and their baby son. As a factory worker, Joseph Schmidt belonged to the part of the ghetto population that still was considered useful and therefore needed to stay. It was not easy to come to such a job, because, of course, everyone was after it. Joseph and Leokadia Schmidt, too, needed quite a lot of money and good connections, but they managed to achieve their intended purpose. In the meantime, the world around this family was rapidly getting smaller. In less than two months time between 250,000 and 300,000 people were deported to extermination camps. Schmidt could see how every day the next group of people to be deported was hunted down. In that period she kept a diary about it, which made the first part of the book. Eventually, the family managed to evade deportation and went into hiding elsewhere in the city. Schmidt kept up her diary all this time. She stopped journaling only when the uprising broke out in the Warsaw ghetto. After the war, the family left Europe for Venezuela in America. It was not until mid-sixties that Schmidt decided to continue where she had stopped in 1944, by also recording events after that time. It took several years before she got in touch with Oscar E. Swan, who translated the story from Polish to English. And then nothing was done for 45 years, until the oldest son of Schmidt knocked on Swan's door. The latter once again looked critically at his translation and provided it with notes, which resulted in the final book. It wasn't Schmidt's intention to publish her story as a book ever. She wanted to capture what she had seen and what she had been through, without pretensions about her qualities as a writer. Then again, it is not a book to finish in one session and it can take some time for a reader to get into the story. But it doesn't take away the fact, that Schmidt succeeded in her intention. With a big delay her story resulted into the book, that once again shows, what horrors occurred during the war in and around the Warsaw ghetto. - Traces of War.com Courage is definitely a major part of the human psyche but this diary also emphasizes compassion and how much caring for others in distress can really mean to others... Such a compelling diary and so glad that I purchased this for future reference. - Susan Roberts" Author InformationHolocaust survivor and writer. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |