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Odyssey

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The vivid recollections of participants heighten an account of the harrowing journey of 500 Jews from Czechoslovakia to Palestine, a journey lasting four years and involving hunger, shipwreck, and internment

255 pages, Hardcover

First published November 1, 1984

22 people want to read

About the author

John Bierman

11 books2 followers
John David Bierman, journalist and author.

John Bierman was one of the last of a generation of buccaneering reporters and writers who pursued successful careers across the media. Newspaper reporter, editor, radio correspondent, television "fireman", documentary maker and, finally, acclaimed historian, Bierman excelled at each, in a working life that reached back to the days of plate cameras and reporters in trilbies.

His big stories as a BBC TV reporter included a 13-minute, mainly ad-libbed, report from Bloody Sunday in Derry in 1972 (which won a Cannes TV Festival award), the Indo-Pakistan war of 1971 and the Turkish invasion of Cyprus in 1974. His final incarnation as a historian was pursued in the Mediterranean calm of a Cypriot farmhouse - he liked to describe himself as a "palm-tree man". The military historian Sir John Keegan wrote of Alamein: War Without Hate (2002), which Bierman co-authored with fellow journalist Colin Smith: "Few historians write as fluently as they do; few journalists achieve their standards of accuracy and inclusiveness."

Bierman was born within the sound of Bow Bells in London. His father, an antiques dealer, beat a hasty exit, and his mother, who ran a dress shop, paid attention to her son only when in funds. Largely raised by his grandparents, and evacuated from London during the second world war, he had, therefore, a peripatetic childhood that ideally prepared him for life as a globetrotting reporter. His love of the English language was acquired young. Despite attending 16 schools, he had a sound basic education, and could recite long passages of poetry.

In 1960, Bierman was headhunted by the Aga Khan to found and edit The Nation, in Nairobi. Those four years were among his happiest professionally. A colleague recalls: "John was a great editor - driving, dynamic, young, assured, foul-mouthed, contemptuous of settlers, frightened of nobody, a marvellous design man and an elegant writer." He next moved to the Caribbean as a managing editor.

He returned to England in the mid-1960s just as the BBC was recruiting experienced print journalists to stiffen its staff of largely university graduates - "all rather posh men", according to Mike Sullivan, another of the hard-bitten tribe who joined when Bierman did.

Bierman's breakthrough book was Righteous Gentile: The Story of Raoul Wallenberg (1981), which brought to international attention the then largely neglected story of the Swedish diplomat who rescued Hungarian Jews from the Nazis. Bierman's words are inscribed on Wallenberg's statue in central London: "The 20th century spawned two of history's vilest tyrannies. Raoul Wallenberg outwitted the first but was swallowed up by the second. His triumph over Nazi genocide reminds us that the courageous and committed individual can prevail against even the cruellest state machine. The fate of the six million Jews he was unable to rescue reminds us of the evil to which racist ideas can drive whole nations. Finally, his imprisonment reminds us not only of Soviet brutality but also of the ignorance and indifference which led the free world to abandon him. We must never forget these lessons."

One of Bierman's books - The Heart's Grown Brutal, a thriller set in Northern Ireland - was written under the pseudonym David_Brewster; he was still on the BBC staff and not supposed to moonlight. In all, he published eight books (two written with Smith), continuing to work after a kidney (donated by his son Jonathan) transplant in 2002. Despite a later heart bypass, arthritis and damaged nerves in his neck which made writing torture, he stayed at his keyboard. He told an interviewer: "Working, in the sense of writing books, I shall do until I drop because it is my life."

(source: The Guardian)

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Caryn Tanis.
23 reviews
December 29, 2020
A wonderfully detailed account of the last boat out of Europe to Palestine and the fate of it's 514 passengers. It took 4 years and many incredible events. Not everyone made it, and by all accounts, it was so highly unlikely that any of them would, but the outcome for many was a well-deserved triumph. The hardships that the Jewish group had to endure was incredible.
Profile Image for Rick.
12 reviews
February 26, 2022
I read this because my great grandparents were on the Pentcho and wasn’t sure how genuinely interesting this story would be. It held my attention from start to end, was well researched and informative.

The biggest take-away for me was the amazing humanity of the Italians… Wow! I have never heard about this anywhere else. It was an inspiration and a pleasure to read about these honourable Italian people.
Profile Image for Renaud Maurin.
18 reviews1 follower
August 8, 2024
A beautiful, exciting, tragic, and ultimately enlightening read.

I only came to read this book thanks to its brief mention in Michael Frank's fantastic, "One hundred Saturdays". Bless.

I'd recommend reading both! They mesh nicely, and are brisk reads.
Profile Image for Frances.
1,704 reviews6 followers
April 26, 2022
Incredible story of survival. The Italians come off very well in the story.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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