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The Unwritten Diary of Israel Unger /

At the end of World War II, only nine Jews remained of the 25,000 Jews who had lived in Tarnow, Poland. Israel Unger, three of his family members, and five other Jews hid for two years behind a false wall in the attic of the Dagnan flour mill. After the war, the family was still not safe in Poland a...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Gammon, Carolyn, 1959- (Autor)
Otros Autores: Unger, Israel, 1938-
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Waterloo, Ontario : Wilfrid Laurier University Press, [2013]
Colección:Book collections on Project MUSE.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Part 1. The Only Jews in Poland. Srulik Is Born in Tar now
  • Wysiedlenia
  • My Father's Courage
  • Dagnan's Flour Mill
  • The Hideout
  • The Only Jews in Poland
  • Kissing a Soviet Soldier's Boot
  • Matzos from America.
  • Part 4. The Bubble Counter
  • Leaving Home: Montreal to Fredericton
  • The Bubble Counter
  • Photochemistry in Texas
  • Under the Chuppah in Minto, New Brunswick
  • The Young Professor-From Texas to Saint John
  • ALS-My Father's Death
  • Charlie's Troubles
  • A Mark for Canada
  • Sharon and Sheila
  • The Best Granny.
  • Part 5. Dean Unger
  • Dean Unger
  • Struggles with Charlie
  • My Mother and Her Backbone of Steel
  • Marlene
  • Making Up for Lost Time
  • Airplane Accident
  • Telling My Story.
  • Part 6. "They Know My Name Is Srulik!"
  • Return to Tarnow
  • A Modern Righteous Gentile: Meeting Adam Bartosz
  • Meeting Mr. Dagnan
  • Skorupa
  • Kalman Goldberg-Outside the Hideout
  • Rescue Children, Inc.
  • Ryglice and Dabrowa
  • State Archives and Registry Office
  • My Birth House
  • Matzevahs for My Family
  • "They know my name is Srulik!"
  • "How did the Holocaust affect you?"
  • Afterword (Carolyn Gammon)
  • Writing The Unwritten Diary.