The Girl from Human Street: Ghosts of Memory in a Jewish Family

# Read * The Girl from Human Street: Ghosts of Memory in a Jewish Family by Roger Cohen ✓ eBook or Kindle ePUB. The Girl from Human Street: Ghosts of Memory in a Jewish Family Keith Wheelock said Poignant, beautifully crafted Jewish family saga. I found this book a page turner, beautifully written with superb research and reporting. It is impossible to grasp fully such complex, multi-layered narrative in a single reading.On one level I found it an extraordinary saga of a Jewish familys history--displacement, assimilation, prejudice, survival, and expressing human love and anguish. Cohen dwelt on lost memories and how families often kept silent about familial history.

The Girl from Human Street: Ghosts of Memory in a Jewish Family

Author :
Rating : 4.71 (596 Votes)
Asin : B00RNDP73W
Format Type :
Number of Pages : 249 Pages
Publish Date : 2013-03-07
Language : English

DESCRIPTION:

Keith Wheelock said Poignant, beautifully crafted Jewish family saga. I found this book a page turner, beautifully written with superb research and reporting. It is impossible to grasp fully such complex, multi-layered narrative in a single reading.On one level I found it an extraordinary saga of a Jewish family's history--displacement, assimilation, prejudice, survival, and expressing human love and anguish. Cohen dwelt on lost memories and how families often kept silent about familial history. One might wonder why he dwelt so heavily on the Lithuanian heritage that he family had left and seemingly ignored generations before Cohen was born. I found this esse. "Deeply moving, beautifully-written and accurate account of the South African Jewish experience, across generations & continents" according to eric hassall. Through the vehicle of his family stories across generations and countries, Roger Cohen has captured the South African Jewish experience, from its origins in Eastern Europe - its depth, its richness, its difficulties and struggles. But the book covers much more than thisCohen's parents emigrate from Johannesburg to London, and his mother, June Cohen, develops a severe depressive illness. Mr Cohen postulates that that his mother's dislocation from a warm, loving family, an easy-going life in sunny privileged-under-apartheid South Africa, to grim grey post-war London, was a major contributor . MM said Ignore the Times review. Cohen succeeds in conveying the history of his family as it relocates from a small shtetl in Lithuania to South Africa at the turn of the century. He does so with accurate depiction of Jewish life in the new country against the background of the Afrikana control of the vast black population. Into this story he weaves, skillfully, the descriptions of family members, their personalities, foibles and differing attitudes to their new homeland.After World War II, a new chapter opens as the Cohen family leaves for England and he explains in most personal terms, his parents decision to move out of

The award-winning New York Times columnist and former foreign correspondent turns a compassionate yet discerning eye on the legacy of his own family - most notably his mother's - in order to understand more profoundly the nature of modern Jewish experience. Cohen illuminates the uneasy resonance of the racism his family witnessed living in apartheid-era South Africa and the ambivalence felt by his Israeli cousin when tasked with policing the occupied West Bank. He explores the pervasive Jewish sense of "otherness" and finds it has been a significant factor in his family's history of manic depression. This tale of remembrance and repression, suicide and resilience, moral ambivalence and uneasily evolving loyalties (religious, ethnic, national) both tells an unflinching personal story and contributes an important chapter to the ongoing narrative of Jewish life.. Through his emotionally lucid prose, we relive the anomie of European Jews after

OTHER BOOK COLLECTION