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"It's 1939 and Hitler just invaded Poland. Henry is 13 years old, and unbeknownst to him or his family, his life is about to change forever. Soon he is torn from his siblings and parents and finds himself packed into a covered truck with dozens of desperate strangers. He doesn't have any idea where he's going or when he'll be let out, if ever. Henry is now struggling for his life in one of the most diabolical and murderous events in human history--the Nazi plan to exterminate every last Jew in Europe. Travel with him to a munitions factory in his home town of Radom, where he is forced to labor…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"It's 1939 and Hitler just invaded Poland. Henry is 13 years old, and unbeknownst to him or his family, his life is about to change forever. Soon he is torn from his siblings and parents and finds himself packed into a covered truck with dozens of desperate strangers. He doesn't have any idea where he's going or when he'll be let out, if ever. Henry is now struggling for his life in one of the most diabolical and murderous events in human history--the Nazi plan to exterminate every last Jew in Europe. Travel with him to a munitions factory in his home town of Radom, where he is forced to labor twelve hours a day with barely enough rations to keep him alive. Discover how he manages to obtain extra food through ingenuity and a willingness to risk his life. Would we have the courage to do the same? Follow Henry to an airstrip in Unterriexingen where he is put to work in the freezing cold with barely any clothes and no shoes to protect him from the elements. Learn how, during an Allied air strike, he escapes to a nearby farmhouse where he pleads with the owner to take him in after he's caught eating with the swine. Feel what it's like to hold a Luger for the first time while Henry struggles with the idea of killing the Nazi officer who allows him to clean his pistol and shine his boots when he is not forced to work building what would someday become his own prison. Would you pull the trigger? Walk with Henry on a 'death march' through the streets of Germany with no end in sight, having to endure the taunts of passersby who yell nasty epithets and throw stones at him while he reaches for a discarded apple core and is stabbed in the back by a Nazi soldier's bayonet. How many of us would have the strength to continue in such circumstances? Journey 600 feet below the earth to the salt mines in Kochendorf where Henry is forced to slave all day in unbearable conditions while building Nazi storage facilities for art stolen from Jews throughout Europe. Experience the horror of a massacre that forces Henry to take quick action that leaves him crawling for his life through the snow-filled forests of the Swiss Alps to emerge as one of a handful of survivors. Never take another day for granted after hearing this harrowing tale of courage and survival that leads Henry to freedom after being liberated by Black American GI's who are themselves fighting racism and inequality in a segregated U.S. military. Gain insights as to why the Nazis, and Hitler in particular, hated the Jews, making them the enemy of society and labeling them untermenschen--subhuman. This true-to-life story shines as a beacon of hope and perseverance and serves as a backdrop-narrative to remind us that racism and hate can lead to murderous behavior and the rapid destruction of civil society. Every Last Jew is a beautifully written memoir by Henry's son Mark Koperweis that will take you on a journey that is up-close, personal, and in full living horror. When you emerge, you will never again see the world or your life in the same way. It will change you, as it did Henry, forever."
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Autorenporträt
Mark Koperweis was born in 1957, just twelve years after Henry, the protagonist in Every Last Jew, was liberated from the Dachau concentration camp. The second of Henry's three children, he grew up in the small town of East Rockaway, New York, on the South Shore of Long Island. In this Irish/Italian working-class neighborhood he and his group of Jewish friends were a small minority. He always felt proud of his Jewish heritage and especially of his father being a Holocaust survivor. He knew at an early age that one day he would tell his father's story to the world. Shortly after moving to California in 1984 he started working in the drapery and window coverings industry where he found that working with textiles came naturally to him after he had spent many summers as a teenager working in his father's garment factory. He currently lives in Oakland, California, where he is sole proprietor of a successful window coverings Installation business called draperyGuru(R). He is the proud father of four children. Mark enjoys playing acoustic drums and electronic percussion in his current band Turn Around Sound and has many times travelled to India where he studied traditional drumming on the tabla of Northern India and the khol of West Bengal. He also plays the bongos and cajon percussion instruments from Latin America as well as the djembe and dumbek from Africa and the Middle East. His lifelong interest in the religions and philosophies of the Orient led him to study the I-Ching, the Bhagavad Gita, Shrimad Bhagavatam, the Ramayana, and many other literatures that form the basis of Hindu and Buddhist teachings. After his first trip to India in 1977 he decided to teach himself how to read, write, and speak Hindi. In more recent years his studies have focused on both modern and ancient Jewish history. Recently Mark became the executive director and co-founder, along with his two siblings, of The Henry Koperweis Foundation for Holocaust Education, a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization dedicated to promoting an awareness of the atrocities committed by the Nazis against the Jews of Europe as told through Henry's personal experience. In the early 1990's he sat down with his father Henry to record his personal testimony of growing up in Radom, Poland during the time that Adolf Hitler came to power and invaded his country. Henry explained how he and his family were forcibly torn from their home and moved to a ghetto, then systematically forced to work in various labor camps, and eventually were separated and deported to death camps. Over the years Mark has transcribed over six hours of videotape to compile this current true-to-life publication of his father's remarkable tale of survival.