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Motherland

Growing Up with the Holocaust

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A groundbreaking second-generation memoir of the Holocaust and its legacy by Otto Frank’s goddaughter—“The extraordinary tale is heroic” (The New York Times).
 
Rita Goldberg recounts the extraordinary story of her mother, Hilde Jacobsthal, a close friend of Anne Frank’s family who was fifteen when the Nazis invaded Holland. After the arrest of her parents in 1943, Hilde fled to Belgium, living out the war years in an extraordinary set of circumstances—first among the Resistance, and then at Bergen-Belsen after its liberation. In the words of The Guardian, the story is “worthy of a film script.”
 
As astonishing as Hilde’s story is, Rita herself emerges as the central character in this utterly unique memoir. Proud of her mother and yet struggling to forge an identity in the shadow of such heroic accomplishments—not to mention her family’s close relationship to the iconic Frank family—Goldberg offers an unflinching look at the struggles faced by children and grandchildren whose own lives are haunted by historic tragedy.
 
Motherland is the culmination of a lifetime of reflection and a decade of research. It is an epic story of survival, adventure, and new life.
 
“A double memoir that braids her parents’ story with her own, and succeeds in articulating a difficult truth.” —The Economist
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    • Kirkus

      January 15, 2015
      A daughter revisits her mother's harrowing past.Goldberg (Comparative Literature/Harvard Univ.; Sex and Enlightenment: Women in Richardson and Diderot, 1984) grew up knowing that her parents had survived the Holocaust through a combination of luck, agonizing struggles and selfless acts of heroism. Her emotionally shattering memoir focuses on her mother's experiences, as the author seeks to understand a parent she felt had distanced herself from her children and to explore the legacy of the Holocaust on her own identity. "I have never known what to do with this history," writes Goldberg. "It makes a better tale than anything that has happened in my own life, and it has to some extent paralyzed me." She and her sisters felt they "had to live up to the myth we inherited...[of] our grandparents' martyrdom, on the one hand, and our parents' exceptional courage, on the other." They felt inadequate and inconsequential in comparison. Surely, Hilde Jacobsthal emerges as heroic in Goldberg's sensitive recounting, documented by material from the Netherlands Institute for War, Holocaust, and Genocide Studies; histories and memoirs; and probing interviews with her mother, father and uncle. Living with her parents and brother in Amsterdam, Hilde was best friends with Anne Frank's older sister, Margot; after the war, Otto Frank became Rita Goldberg's godfather. Hilde happened to be away from Amsterdam when the Nazis made a sweeping arrest of Jews, including her parents. The 15-year-old returned home to find the Nazi seal on her door and her parents gone. She fled to Belgium and spent the war years in hiding, fearful always of betrayal. After the war, she served tirelessly and devotedly as a nurse, child care center director, and liaison with the British Red Cross in Bergen-Belsen, the American Joint Distribution Committee, and the U.N. Relief and Rehabilitation Administration. Goldberg writes eloquently of the "volcanic pressures" that shaped her family's story and continue to haunt her own.

      COPYRIGHT(2015) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      April 15, 2015
      The Holocaust cannot and should not be understood, but it must be remembered. So says author Goldberg in this this searing family narrative. Born in Basel, Switzerland, in 1949, Goldberg, goddaughter of Otto Frank, father of Anne, tells the story of her Jewish mother, Hilde, a close friend of the Frank family, who, as a teen in Nazi-occupied Holland, fled to Belgium and survived the Holocaust after her parents' arrest. Following the liberation, Hilde worked in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp with a tiny group of Jewish survivors, sorting the living from the dead and supervising the first stages of their cure in a community where genocide had wiped out 106,000 of Holland's 140,000 Jewish residents. Despite emphasizing the role of the kindness of strangers in saving Jews, she is just as candid about how readily most Dutch government officials went along with the Nazis and how the vast majority of the population lay low and looked the other way. Of course, the family story, and especially the Frank connection, will draw readers (she knew Otto very well, right up to his postwar visits to the U.S.), who will be open to discussion of the big issues of perpetrators, victims, and, especially, bystanders, then and now.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2015, American Library Association.)

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