8,90 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandkostenfrei*
Versandfertig in 3-5 Tagen
  • Broschiertes Buch

Channa Gildoni was born in Leipzig in 1923 as the only child of the Moronowiczs. The family belongs to the so-called "Ostjuden" and is part of the Orthodox community. A happy childhood is followed by terrible experiences under National Socialism: discrimination, racial mania, anti-Semitism, the so-called Polish Action and the Night of Pogrom. Just in time, she manages to escape via Hungary to Tel Aviv. A new life begins there. Channa Gildoni is Chairwoman of the Association of Former Leipziger in Israel, bridge builder, bearer of the pin of honor of the City of Leipzig and the Federal Cross of…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Channa Gildoni was born in Leipzig in 1923 as the only child of the Moronowiczs. The family belongs to the so-called "Ostjuden" and is part of the Orthodox community. A happy childhood is followed by terrible experiences under National Socialism: discrimination, racial mania, anti-Semitism, the so-called Polish Action and the Night of Pogrom. Just in time, she manages to escape via Hungary to Tel Aviv. A new life begins there. Channa Gildoni is Chairwoman of the Association of Former Leipziger in Israel, bridge builder, bearer of the pin of honor of the City of Leipzig and the Federal Cross of Merit on ribbon. She is one of the last contemporary witnesses who can report on Jewish life in Germany before the Shoah and is committed to reconciliation as well as to lively and friendly German-Israeli relations even into old age.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Autorenporträt
was born in Leipzig in 1989. He studied political science and African studies in Leipzig and Stellenbosch/South Africa. Since 2013 he has been organizing and supervising the Visitors' Programme for Former Jewish Leipzigers and their Descendants. He works as a Senior Project Manager at the Office for International Affairs of the City of Leipzig and is also responsible, among other things, for the city partnership between Leipzig and Herzliya/Israel. In 2020 he gained his Ph.D. with a thesis about international organizations.

was born in Nuremberg in 1963 and studied philosophy, sinology, and theology in Tübingen, Beijing, and Paris. She gained her Ph.D. in sinology, and from 1994 worked as a lecturer at the University of Leipzig. Since 2001, she has been Head of the Office for International Affairs of the City of Leipzig, where she is in charge of the European and international activities of the City of Leipzig, including partnerships with other cities and the Visitors' Programme for Former Jewish Leipzigers and their Descendants. She also supervises this network.

was born in Altenburg in 1947. She studied history and education in Leipzig and gained her Ph.D. in Berlin. She worked as a scientific employee at various institutions in Leipzig and retired in 2012. Between 1996 and 2019 she published numerous publications about regional Jewish history, in particular about the work and achievements of Jewish doctors in Leipzig.