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Paperback Sobibor: The Forgotten Revolt Book

ISBN: 0964944200

ISBN13: 9780964944206

Sobibor: The Forgotten Revolt

Judaica: Holocaust. This is a survivor's report from the death camp in Sobibor, Poland. Sixty pages of photos. This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

$16.89
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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Scientific approach

Author has managed to approach the Sobibor revolt with maximal objectivity despite the fact that he was intensely involved. This book and "From the Ashes of Sobibor" also written by Mr. T. Blatt should be read by all adolescents in the World. Both books are accurate accounts of what happened to Jewish people during WWII depicting those horrible events that are so hard to understand and almost impossible to accept as human history. Drs. Kees van den Bosch MEd MBA, The Netherlands.

Very factual and well studied

This book is written by a Sobibor survivor, and as such is perhaps the most factual account of what happened in the secret Nazi death camp that is currently available. It provides harrowing accounts of the atrocities committed and of all those involved from both sides. It is well researched and written and describes not only the day to day operations of the camp, but also the plans and report of the escape that occurred on October 14th, 1943 which led to the camp's destruction shortly after. An excellent account that everyone should read.

Amazing and crushing

I had the honor of meeting Mr. Blatt when he spoke to my Holocaust literature class. He is one of the most quietly impressive men you could ever meet. His story is excrutiating and astounding. A must read for Holocaust studies. And really, this is the sort of story Everyone should read to know what sort of men exist - the evil & the brave.

This book teaches a lesson we can't afford to forget

I had the pleasure of hearing Mr. Blatt speak and interviewing him several years ago and I bought a copy of his book at that time. I am sorry to say it sat on my bookcase up until about a week ago - sorry because once I started to read it I couldn't put it down! I would recommend this book to everyone because it teaches one of the most important lessons there is about our history. It is a lesson I hope the world never forgets

No one who reads it will ever be able to forget Sobibor

Sobibor The Forgotten Revolt by Thomas Blatt. Revieved by Michael Nutkiewicz, Ph.D. Director. Chief Historian - Shoah A Steven Spielberg Foundation. Los Angeles.Thomas Blatt has written a remarkable book that tells two stories. The first story is about a notorious Nazi death camp in Poland called Sobibor. This death camp achieved the awful task assigned by the Nazis: over a quarter of a million Jewish men, women and children were murdered there. The second story is about the revolt at Sobibor. In the fall of 1943, over 300 slave workers escaped after a short, violent and desperate revolt. In the history of Jewish resistance movement under the German occupation,the revolt in Sobibor ranks the second in magnitude after the Warsaw ghetto uprising. It was the biggest and most successful uprising in all of the Nazi camps, where Jews were able to escape en masse. An excerpt from Auschwitz Cammandant Hoes' memoirs concerning the revolt confirms the above. "...The Jews (of Sobibor) were able to achieve a major breakout, during which almost all of the German personnel were wiped out..." Blatt tells those two stories in mesaured tones:he neither exaggerates the heroism of the Jewish prisoners nor demonizes their cruel victimizers. This is a remarkable feat in itself, because Blatt was one of the prisoners who had a role in the revolt and who escaped from Sobibor. "I forced myself to be emotionally detached as a survivor," Blatt writes in the introduction "concerning myself only with recording history, while I sought interviews with the perpetrators themselves." He begins with a brief review of the Operation Reinhard, the Nazi plan to build death camps in Poland. He comes quickly to the story of Sobibor. The systematic killing was in full swing in May 1942. The victims came from Poland, the Netherlands,Slovakia, Austria, Germany, France and the former Soviet Union. The author witnessed the genocide and detailed the entire procedure in diary entries during and after the w! ar. Next he describes the revolt in greater detail, reconstructing the revolt step by step, describinbg his own escape trough the barbed wire and mine fields. The story of what occured after the escape is equally dramatic but painful."Most were murdered by hostile bands or individuals rangind from fascist, nationalistic, or anti-Semitic organizations, to common bandits. Only 58 survivors from Sobibor are known to have been liberated by the Allied armies." Blatt follows the story of Sobibor beyond the war, tracing the fate of both the victims and the perpetrators. One of the most remarkable aspects of this book is the author's first hand testimony and that of the former prisoners and other witnesses he personally interviewed. Most compelling however, are Blatt's interviews with Karl Frenzel, a Nazi officer at Sobibor. Blatt interviewed him in 1983 and reveals some portions of that transcript. Frenzel offers this explanation for his role in the murder of hundreds of thousands of peop
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