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Because of Eva
Because of Eva: A Jewish Genealogical Journey | Susan J. Gordon
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In Because of Eva, an American Jewish woman travels to Eastern Europe and Israel to solve mysteries in her familys past by delving into World War II and Holocaust history. What began as a seemingly simple search for "Eva," the elderly relative who had signed Gordon's grandfather's death certificate in New York long ago, became a journey of discovery when Gordon found her in Tel Aviv. There, she heard Evas stories of survival during the Holocaust, especially in Nazi-occupied Budapest. Eventually, Gordon would retrace Evas steps in Budapest and visit ancestral towns in Ukraine to bear witness to the slaughter of entire populations of Jews. Amid remnants of loss and destruction in the small town where her grandfather was born, Gordon also uncovered details of her familys world before relatives immigrated to America. Gordons journey into her past provided the deep sense of connection and belonging she needed as an adult child of divorce and abuse. Gaining insight about her familys history, Gordon reconciles issues of betrayal and loyalty, and finally finds her place in Judaism. Part memoir, part detective story, Because of Eva is an intimate tale of one womans history within the epic sweep of world events in the twentieth century.
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With Adolf Eichmann in charge the massive deportation of Hungarian Jews to Auschwitz began on May 15, 1944. By July 8 more than 437,000 Hungarian Jews had been sent to Auschwitz; 90 percent went directly from the trains to the gas chambers.
In those few weeks more Jews were gassed and burned at Auschwitz than in the previous eighteen months. Most of them came from the Hungarian countryside,the majority of Budapest's 100,000 Jews were not deported

TheBookHippie When the Arrow Cross unseated Horthy on October 15, however, they set about murdering the Jews of Budapest; 10,000 to 15,000 were shot along the banks of the Danube River. On January 18, 1945 Soviet troops captured Budapest, and for the Jews of Hungary the war came to an end -but not before 550,000 of them had been murdered. 9mo
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CBee Have you read this? 9mo
CBee The subject of the book, Rudolf Vrba, tried desperately to get those in power to warn Hungary 🙁 9mo
TheBookHippie @CBee oh I‘ll add that book! So many sad sad evil gut wrenching things … there‘s a good documentary on Netflix about Hungary and the aftermath. 9mo
CBee @TheBookHippie it‘s very good. A bit sad as I‘d never heard of him - he saved so many lives. 9mo
Catsandbooks So horrific, but also importantly educational 9mo
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