There are so many books about the Holocaust and Auschwitz, in particular. What’s different about this one is the extraordinary fact that Helen “Zippi” Tichauer, age 25, and David Wisnia, age 17, were able to survive three years in the most inhumane conditions, where the life expectancy usually was measured in days, weeks or months.
Both Zippi and David figured out that they each had to look good, as healthy as possible, and be incredibly useful. Zippi had a graphics background that she used to find ways to become indispensable to her captors. She worked in the administration office, enabling her to manipulate names, numbers and lists, thus saving thousands of prisoners. She forms a romantic relationship with David, and, unbeknownst to him, saves his life five times.
The details of the horrendous conditions at this and other Nazi death camps cannot be overstated, but they must be written and spoken about, because history is not always studied and remembered.
“More than sixty-five hundred American soldiers died on June 6 alone, and 41 percent of Americans were not clear on why the US was at war. They’d heard about the Nazis’ persecution of the Jews, and yet they didn’t want to take in refugees. Many Americans believed that the stories of concentration camps were propaganda. How could such horrific tales be real?”
We must remember.