A brilliant life My mother's inspiring true story of surviving the Holocaust

Rachelle Unreich, 1966-

Book - 2023

"The powerful, true story of a Holocaust survivor told by her daughter--a tale that reminds us of the resilience of the soul and the ability of the heart to heal. As Mira is nearing the end of her life, her daughter Rachelle wants to find out how her mother had lived through four concentration camps, including Auschwitz, and a Death March. There was a mystery to her survival, it seemed--which perhaps had something to do with the strange things that always happened around her. And, incredibly, when giving testimony later in life, she says that it was during this time--despite witnessing the depths of man's cruelty--that she learned about "the goodness of people." Born in Czechoslovakia, Mira was only 12 years old when Wor...ld War II broke out. At 88, living in Australia, she is diagnosed with cancer, and her journalist daughter decides to interview her to distract her from her illness. What Rachelle discovers about her mother helps her fit together the jigsaw pieces of her own life. A Brilliant Life portrays not only how remote a prospect it was to live through the Holocaust, but what it is like to be the child of a survivor. A story of love, loss, wonder and the deepest kind of faith, A Brilliant Life questions the role that fate, chance and destiny play in one's life. It is a tribute to family, a story of incredible resilience and a chronicle of the deep connection between mother and child that not even death can destroy"--

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940.5318/Unreich
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2nd Floor New Shelf 940.5318/Unreich (NEW SHELF) Due Nov 29, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
New York : Harper 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Rachelle Unreich, 1966- (author)
Edition
First US edition
Physical Description
x, 290 pages ; 21 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9780063328754
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Australian journalist Unreich recounts the life story of her mother Mira Unreich (1927--2017) in this searing debut history. Mira's childhood in Czechoslovakia was happy, but around the time Germany annexed the Sudetenland in 1938, she began to experience antisemitism from her neighbors. In 1941, the occupying Germans forced Jews to wear identifying items on their clothing. By 1942, most of the Jewish families in their small town had been deported. Mira's father, Dolfie Blumenstock, risked his life to get forged identity papers to hundreds of Jews and gave shelter to members of the resistance. When the Nazis came to arrest him, Blumenstock was shot while trying to escape, and Mira and her mother Genya ended up in the Plaszow death camp, where Genya soon perished. Mira managed to survive Plasvow, as well as Auschwitz. After the war, she eventually settled in Australia, where, Unreich emphasizes, she built meaningful and loving relationships. Some portions of the narrative hit a false note, as when Unreich declares that the "concept of good luck seems woven into the fabric of the Jewish people." Still, Unreich does her mother's experiences justice, making clear that the Nazi genocide could not crush Mira's desire and wherewithal to lead a happy life. The result is an uplifiting, if at times overly rosy, account.(Nov.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Journalist Unreich makes a graceful book debut with a family history, gleaned from interviews that she conducted with her 89-year-old mother, Mira, before she died from cancer. Born in a Czech village in 1927, Mira was the youngest of five children of Dolfie and Genya Blumenstock, Jewish shopkeepers. Her peaceful childhood ended in September 1940, when she was 13. Jews were banned from owning businesses or attending school, and their private property was confiscated by Czechoslovakian officials. In 1942, the round-ups began. Vowing to keep his family safe, Dolfie strategized their escape. Mira, like her siblings, had non-Jewish papers, but for her safety was sent away from the family to another town, where she rented a room and worked. At the same time as Dolfie protected his own family, he and his son smuggled Jews out of the Bochnia and Warsaw Ghettos, with the help of non-Jewish drivers. They hid the fugitives in homes, including Dolfie's own, before sending them on to Budapest. But in 1944, the family met the fate of so many other Jews: Mira witnessed as Dolfie was murdered outside of his house; she and her mother were sent to a camp, one of over 40,000 situated all over Eastern Europe. Kraków-Płaszów, where Mira was sent first, was located in the south of Poland. "Originally a forced labour camp," Unreich writes, "it had become an effective killing location." By the time the war ended, Mira had spent nearly eight months in four camps; her mother and a brother had been killed. Mira's recollections of the cruelty and sadism of the Holocaust are wrenching, yet the experiences did not quash her abiding faith in humanity. As a wife, mother, neighbor, and friend, she both embraced and enacted goodness. A daughter's tender portrait of a woman who lived through terror. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.