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Bevat de naam: Janina Baumann

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Pseudoniemen en naamsvarianten
Lewison, Janina
Geboortedatum
1926-08-18
Overlijdensdatum
2009-12-29
Geslacht
female
Nationaliteit
Poland (birth)
Geboorteplaats
Warsaw, Poland
Plaats van overlijden
Leeds, Yorkshire, England, UK
Woonplaatsen
Warsaw, Poland
Tel Aviv, Israel
Leeds, Yorkshire, England, UK
Opleiding
Warsaw Academy of Social Sciences
Beroepen
librarian
memoirist
Holocaust survivor
Relaties
Bauman, Zygmunt (husband)
Bauman, Lydia (daughter)
Bauman, Irena (daughter)
Sfard, Anna (daughter)
Korte biografie
Janina Bauman, née Lewinson, was born in Warsaw into a family of assimilated, well-to-do Polish Jews. Her father was a surgeon and army officer. Nazi Germany's invasion of her country in 1939 put an end to her idyllic childhood. At age 14, Janina, along with her sister Zosia and their mother, was trapped in the Warsaw Ghetto and constantly on the run to avoid deportation. In January 1943, the three women managed to flee the Ghetto and were hidden on the Aryan side of Warsaw by friends and members of the Polish resistance. Janina contracted tuberculosis. After the failure of the Warsaw Uprising, the three women fled to southern Poland. It was while hiding in the house of a peasant woman in the countryside that Janina learned of the death of her father in the massacre of Polish officers at Katyn Forest, from a list of victims in a newspaper spread on the kitchen floor over which she was peeling potatoes. She survived the war, studied journalism at the Warsaw Academy of Social Sciences, and in 1948 married Zygmunt Bauman, with whom she had three daughters. She worked in the Polish film industry until rising anti-Semitic persecution compelled the family to leave Poland for Israel in 1968. Three years later, they emigrated to the UK, settling in Leeds, West Yorkshire. She wrote her autobiography in two volumes, Winter in the Morning (1986), based on diaries she kept as a young girl, and A Dream of Belonging (1988). They were republished together in one volume as Beyond These Walls in 2007.

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This was a very quick read - as much as the story was disturbing, it was written in a very engaging way, and even though I knew the author eventually escaped the Warsaw Ghetto, it was a page-turner to find out how she managed to slip from the grasp of the Nazis time and again. The bulk of the book covers the time period of 1937 to 1945 and then there are 23 pages covering her life after the war up to when this version was published in 2006. This part of the book was tough also because the next 60 years were not that easy for her, first living in Poland, forced to leave and living in Israel for a few years, and then finally settling in Leeds. She starts this last chapter by saying she has had a turbulent life, full of bitter disappointments and loss, but still a happy life, that she would not exchange for any other.

I was touched by the book and by her last message to her readers: You do not have to belong to be happy.
… (meer)
 
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LisaMorr | Feb 12, 2024 |

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Statistieken

Werken
5
Ook door
2
Leden
142
Populariteit
#144,865
Waardering
3.8
Besprekingen
1
ISBNs
18
Talen
6

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