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Last Stop Auschwitz
Last Stop Auschwitz: My story of survival from within the camp | Eddy de Wind
4 posts | 4 read | 11 to read
'How much I learned from this brave man... The ultimate Holocaust testimony.' HEATHER MORRIS, author of The Tattooist of Auschwitz and Cilka's Journey With an Afterword by JOHN BOYNE, author of The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas _______________ Eddy de Wind, a Dutch doctor and psychiatrist, was shipped to Auschwitz with his wife Friedel, whom he had met and married at the Westerbork labour camp in the Netherlands. At Auschwitz, they made it through the brutal selection process and were put to work. Each day, each hour became a battle for survival. For Eddy, this meant negotiating with the volatile guards in the medical barracks. For Friedel, it meant avoiding the Nazis barbaric medical experiments. As the end of the war approached and the Russian Army drew closer, the last Nazis fled, taking many prisoners with them, including Friedel. Eddy hid under a pile of old clothes and stayed behind. Finding a notebook and pencil, he began to write with furious energy about his experiences. Last Stop Auschwitz is an extraordinary account of life as a prisoner, a near real-time record of the daily struggle to survive but also of the flickering moments of joy Eddy and Friedel found in each other - passing notes through the fence, sometimes stealing a brief embrace. Documenting the best and the worst of humanity, it is a unique and timeless story that reminds us of what we as humans are capable of, but that there is hope, even in Hell. Thought to be the only complete book written within Auschwitz itself, it will linger with you long after the final page has been turned. _______________ 'Powerful and moving.' WENDY HOLDEN, author of Born Survivors
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paulareadsallthetime
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Pickpick

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ This book was written while Mr. De Wind was in the concentration camps. He would write about what happens on scraps of paper. It was translated into a book after the war. A reminder of how awful human being can be to one another and what we cannot allow to happen again.

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Inkblotsandcoffeestains
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It‘s obviously very difficult to rate a book like this, but I recommend it. After all these years, this has finally been translated into English! Worth a read! Edited to say: this is the only known book written from inside the camp! That makes it all the more surreal.

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Twocougs
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I‘m shattered and 💔. This is the only known book written at Auschwitz. The memoir was first published in the Netherlands in 1946 but just translated recently to English. We must never forget and we all need to do more the prevent genocide around the world.

Cinfhen Having just returned from Poland, where I experienced a full immersion of pre WWII, WWII AND Post WWII history I‘m not sure my heart can withstand another personal account. I heard so many heartbreaking testimonies and saw items and relics that one can‘t begin to imagine.... #NeverAgain #WeRemember 5y
Twocougs @Cinfhen I completely understand. I teach a Holocaust unit and try to read as many as I can BUT this one seemed to really hit me hard. The other two I had planned to read soon, will have to wait longer.😢 it feels strange to say how lucky you were to go and experience that but I‘m so glad you had that opportunity. 5y
Cinfhen Thanks so much, it was an emotionally & physically exhausting trip but one that will stay with me for the rest of my life. What other books were you hoping to read?? 5y
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