Shirli Gilbert is associate professor of history and Jewish / Non-Jewish relations at the University of Southampton, UK. She is also the author of Music in the Holocaust.
Beautifully written and deeply researched, Gilbert’s empathetic but
unblinking investigation of this transnational story suggests that
the belated and well-intentioned inclusion of refugees as
‘Holocaust survivors’ can obscure their particular ambivalent and
traumatic experiences."" – Atina Grossmann
""As German and Austrians Jews were propelled across the globe by
the force of Nazi persecution, bonds of family and friendship were
sustained as long as possible by the fragile threads of
correspondence. ‘People,’ as a contemporary observer put it, ‘were
turned into letters.’ Now, equipped with the empathy, insight, and
writerliness that is her hallmark, Shirli Gilbert is reversing the
process, recovering lives and fates, voices and identities from a
remarkable treasure trove of hidden family correspondence. A
wonderful and enlightening book, not least about survivors’ postwar
trajectories in apartheid South Africa."" – Mark Roseman
""What did it mean to pick up the threads of old friendships after
the Holocaust? To write to a former Nazi who had served in the war
when your parents had been deported and to enlist his help in
tracing what happened to their property and possessions? In this
beautifully realized book, Shirli Gilbert recovers and brings to
light the whole web of scattered relationships that Rudolf Schwab
perpetuated through letters, a family diaspora, and a series of
ties back to postwar West Germany. These invisible correspondents
in turn shaped what kind of father and South African he became. In
this cameo of a family history, the great forces of racism,
emigration, and the Holocaust take on an intimate—almost sepia
tone—and the protagonists' need to find each other does nothing to
lessen the sense of a whole world that had been ripped apart. This
is history writing of the highest order."" – Nicholas Stargardt
""Drawing on a recently discovered treasure trove of correspondence
from the World War II era and beyond, Shirli Gilbert has written a
psychologically nuanced account of a German Jew who fled Nazism and
found refuge in South Africa. Her finely crafted book illuminates
not only the stresses and strains of flight and resettlement in the
1930s and 1940s but also the inability of refugees from Nazism to
ever escape the trauma of those years."" – Todd M. Endelman
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