Skip to content
INTERNATIONAL DELIVERY: Please note, the Christmas deadline has now passed and we can no longer guarantee delivery before 25th December 2025.
INTERNATIONAL DELIVERY: Please note, the Christmas deadline has now passed and we can no longer guarantee delivery before 25th December 2025.

Warsaw Testament

Rokhl Auerbach
Barcode 9798988677383
Paperback

Original price £25.20 - Original price £25.20
Original price
£25.20
£25.20 - £25.20
Current price £25.20

Click here to join our rewards scheme and earn points on this purchase!

Availability:
in stock
FREE shipping

Release Date: 02/07/2024

Edition: Warsaw Ghetto; Rachel Auerbach; Cultural Resistance; World War ii; World War 2; Holocaust; Jewish History; Poland; Oneg Shabbat; Testimonies; Resistance; Underground; Holocaust; Memoir; Archives; Archivist
Genre: Philosophy & Spirituality
Sub-Genre: Theology
Label: White Goat Press
Language: English
Publisher: White Goat Press

Born in Lanowitz, Rokhl Auerbach was a journalist, literary critic, memoirist, and a member of the Warsaw Yiddish literary community before the Holocaust. One of only three surviving members of the Oyneg Shabes archive project, Auerbach's writings became a crucial source of information for historians of prewar Jewish Warsaw and the Warsaw Ghetto.
Born in Lanowitz, a small village in rural Podolia, Rokhl Auerbach was a journalist, literary critic, memoirist, and a member of the Warsaw Yiddish literary community before the Holocaust. Upon the German invasion and occupation of Poland in 1939, she was tasked by historian and social activist Emanuel Ringelblum to run a soup kitchen for the starving inhabitants of the Warsaw Ghetto and later to join his top-secret ghetto archive, the Oyneg Shabes. One of only three surviving members of the archive project, Auerbach's wartime and postwar writings became a crucial source of information for historians of both prewar Jewish Warsaw and the Warsaw Ghetto. After immigrating to Israel in 1950, she founded the witness testimony division at Yad Vashem and played a key role in the development of Holocaust remembrance. Her memoir Warsaw Testament, based on her wartime writings, paints a vivid portrait of the city's prewar Yiddish literary and artistic community and of its destruction at the hands of the Nazis.