Lexington Books
Pages: 204
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7391-4606-4 • Hardback • June 2010 • $121.00 • (£93.00)
978-0-7391-4608-8 • eBook • June 2010 • $115.00 • (£88.00)
Carole Bell Ford is professor emerita at Empire State College, SUNY.
1 A Meeting with Holocaust Survivors
2 Table of Contents
3 Preface and Acknowledgements
Chapter 4 1. Introduction: The Women and the Girls Club
Chapter 5 2. Lodz: A Path to the Ghetto
Chapter 6 3. Growing up: Coming of Age in a Nightmare
Chapter 7 4. Sh'erit ha-Pletah: The "Surviving Remnant"
Chapter 8 5. America: A Home at the Girls Club
Chapter 9 6. After the Girls Club: Settling In, Settling Down
Chapter 10 7. Betty and Lucy: Different Forks in the Road
Chapter 11 8. Child Survivors in Old Age: The Aging Women
12 Bibliography
13 Index
Carole Ford's sensitive profile of young Holocaust survivors whose lives intertwine at the Girls' Club in Brooklyn sheds light on the challenges of forging a new life alone. The Club gave them opportunities for friendship, education and enabled them to rebuild their lives. Theirs are compelling narratives, told with compassion and grace. As we get to know them, we also find that we like them and celebrate their joys as they become wives and mothers, housewives, students, professionals, community volunteers, and very doting grandmothers. Despite their horrific experiences in Nazi occupied Poland, most of them refused to be victimized further and instead overcame the odds and led fulfilling and happy lives."
— Myrna Goldenberg, coauthor of Testimony, Tensions, and Tikkun: Teaching the Holocaust in Colleges and Universities
Carole Bell Ford gets at and renders with clarity and sensitivity the life histories of a fascinating group of young female Holocaust survivors. These histories are complex, filled with irony, ambiguity and compassion —in short, humanity. Without extraneous academic apparatus, and without falling into the trap of seeing horrific experience as somehow making its victims 'better for it,' Ford and her interlocutors tell us something very important, and yes, even hopeful about human resilience.
— Gerald Sorin, Distinguished Professor of Jewish and American Studies State University of New York at New Paltz