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Missing Pieces: A Family Story Retold

ISBN: 978-1-7353296-0-4 (Softcover)     ISBN: 978-1-7353296-1-1 (Hardcover)

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A large tattered envelope stuffed with letters and postcards written between 1934 and 1942 was discovered behind a sofa in my parents home. It contained correspondence written in German, Yiddish, and Hebrew by family members about whom little was known. Many of them perished during the Holocaust. 

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The stories of uncles, aunts, cousins and grandfathers slowly unfolded as each letter and postcard was translated. We read individual accounts of the arrests and deportation of Jewish residents in Germany who held Polish passports, the attack on Warsaw by Nazi Germany, the children’s sorrow when their father was sent to a concentration camp, and a mother’s anguish when the voices of her teenage sons grew silent. 

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While these letters and postcards express the grief and despair shared by countless Jewish families, they resonate as well with determination and hope. There is a message written on a torn scrap of paper that was smuggled out of a concentration camp, a letter from Vilna introducing a new bride to the mother-in-law she would never meet, and a postcard announcing the arrival of a baby girl born in the Warsaw Ghetto.

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The correspondence in that tattered envelope relates the stories of real people, members of one family, during the Holocaust. Each story is personal, and that is the point. When speaking of the Holocaust, we must avoid generalities and focus instead on each individual, family and community—as each matters greatly. The letters and postcards in Missing Pieces: A Family Story Retold provide us with that opportunity.

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Our Story: Martha & Pinkas Isaak

ISBN-978-1-7353296-2-8 (Softcover)

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Martha and Pinkas were married in Berlin, Germany on September 4, 1938, only two months before Kristallnacht, the "Night of Broken Glass." Their wedding was one of the last ceremonies performed in a synagogue in Berlin before WWII. The synagogue in which they were wed was destroyed during the horrific events of Kristallnacht, November 9, 1938.

 

Pinkas was arrested and nearly deported on October 28, 1938, during the Polenaktion, the decree intended to expel all Jewish residents holding Polish passports from the German Reich. The young couple had Polish passports, though they both had been born and raised in Germany.

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Only days after Kristallnacht, Pinkas managed to escape when he ran, barely dressed and barefoot, out the side door of the family's living quarters behind their produce shop—leaving deep footprints in the snow that the Nazi Storm Troopers overlooked because they were busy "roughing up" the younger children and breaking the furniture.

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On December 4, 1938, Martha and Pinkas fled Germany. And so their odyssey began, taking them from Berlin to Venice, London, Tel Aviv, and, finally, to America. Their story is one of history, humanity, courage, and conviction—emphasizing the importance of family, values and tradition.

Missing Pieces: A Family Story Retold and Our Story: Martha and Pinkas Isaak are available at Bookshop.org or through your favorite online bookseller. 

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