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In the East

How My Father and a Quarter Million Polish Jews Survived the Holocaust

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A finalist for the Sami Rohr Prize for Jewish Literature, the National Jewish Book Award, and the Chautauqua Prize

"Not simply another detail of the Holocaust but a matter of enduring existential, psychological and moral reflection." —Johnathan Brent, New York Times Book Review

With a new epilogue and reading group guide featuring a Q&A and commentary with Tara Zahra

Despite decades of outstanding writing about the Holocaust, the full story of roughly a quarter million Jews who survived Nazi extermination in the Soviet interior, Central Asia, and the Middle East is nearly unknown, even to their descendants. Investigating her late father's mysterious identity as a "Tehran Child," literary scholar Mikhal Dekel delved deep into archives —including Soviet files not previously available to Western scholars—on three continents. She pursued the path of these Holocaust refugees from remote Kolyma in Siberia to Tashkent in Uzbekistan and, with the help of an Iranian friend and colleague, to Tehran. It was there that her father, aunt, and nearly a thousand other Jewish refugee children survived the war.

Dekel's part-memoir, part-history, part-literary-political reflection on fate, identity, and memory uncovers the lost story of Jewish refuge in Muslim lands, the complex global politics behind whether refugees live or die, and the collective identity-creation that determines the past we remember.

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    • Booklist

      Starred review from October 15, 2019
      Retracing the path her Polish-born father and aunt took as Jewish children fleeing the Nazis in 1941 brought Dekel (The Universal Jew, 2011) closer to understanding her father, who by the time she knew him was a quintessential Israeli. Thrust into refugee life at age 12, they first traversed Soviet states, then were part of a youth-rescue caravan heading to Tehran, where a burgeoning Polish community (not everyone was Jewish) lived in difficult conditions, but far from the horrors of Nazi-controlled Europe. Using historical documents, interviews, and contemporaneous testimonies collected from her father and other refugee children, Dekel retells stories about the plight of WWII European refugees. Ultimately, as part of a wave of over 1,000 Jewish-Polish youths known as the Tehran Children, they immigrated to Palestine, where they were transformed; no longer persecuted, they were pioneers in what would become Israel six years later. The backstory about how Dekel, now a professor of comparative literature in the U.S., began researching this project with an Iranian colleague, adds an interesting personal aspect to this work of excellent scholarship and a harrowing history illuminating both the specifics of the past and the universal aspects of the refugee experience.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

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