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The world of 1953 seen by a Berlin Rabbi in 1933: "Blitztrains" go full speed underneath the pavements of Berlin, but there are barely any Jews left in the German capital. Mica and Victor, a young love couple from America, are looking for a safe place to live their Jewish identity. They choose to go to the Moon. When Adolf Hitler and his Nazi Party came into power, Rabbi Martin Salomonski (1881-1944) wrote this utopian novel about the "Jewish Question" as a sequel story for a German Jewish newspaper."Rabbi Martin Salomonski's novel is as adventurous as it is daring."(JÜDISCHE ALLGEMEINE, GERMANY)…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The world of 1953 seen by a Berlin Rabbi in 1933: "Blitztrains" go full speed underneath the pavements of Berlin, but there are barely any Jews left in the German capital. Mica and Victor, a young love couple from America, are looking for a safe place to live their Jewish identity. They choose to go to the Moon. When Adolf Hitler and his Nazi Party came into power, Rabbi Martin Salomonski (1881-1944) wrote this utopian novel about the "Jewish Question" as a sequel story for a German Jewish newspaper."Rabbi Martin Salomonski's novel is as adventurous as it is daring."(JÜDISCHE ALLGEMEINE, GERMANY)
Autorenporträt
Rabbi Martin Meir Salomonski (1881-1944) grew up in a merchant family on Berlin's Alexanderplatz. Along with Leo Baeck and Felix Singermann, he was one of the last rabbis in Nazi Berlin. As a writer Martin Salomonski published two novels: the social novel "Die geborene Tugendreich" (1928) and the lunar utopia "Israel on the Moon" (1933). In June 1942 he was deported to the Theresienstadt ghetto and died in Auschwitz in 1944.

Studium der Kulturwissenschaften an der Europa-Universität Viadrina in Frankfurt a/Oder.