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The Warsaw diary of Chaim A. Kaplan

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

"A precious record of Jewish life under Nazi rule." --New York Review of Books "Not only the material for history; it is history itself, agonizingly, triumphantly alive." --Saturday Review Warsaw... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

A graphic description of life in a nightmare

A must-read for students (by which I mean well-read adults as well as individuals in school)of WW II and the Holocaust...Far more effectively than the celebrated Anne Frank Diary, Chaim Kaplan's "scroll of agony" records the thoughts, emotions and observations of someone living through the nightmare of occupied Poland. Kaplan's is a graphic report on the day-to-day existence and persecution of his Polish friends and neighbors. Well written/well-translated, the book stands as a memorable first-person account of a life endured under the most horrific of circumstances.

Excellent and detailed account of Warsaw Ghetto

This is an essential account for historians and for those interested in the Holocaust. Many diaries are not detailed enough to be useful, but this book is a treasure chest of information on many levels. It is over 400 pages, so it is well worth the read. Well-written, riveting, and unforgettable. Steve Wiggins, author of "Streets of Warsaw" Streets of Warsaw: A Novel of the Polish Resistance in World War II

Description of Life in the Warsaw Ghetto

Having read many accounts of existence during the Holocaust, I recommend "Scroll of Agony" because it pulls the reader in on so many levels. The reader can learn about the system the Nazis used to try and fragment Jewish morale, culture, health and lives by attempting to suppress every aspect of Jewish life. What a powerful and understated diary!

an eyewitness and a master storyteller

This is the 4th Warsaw ghetto diary I've read and the 3rd I've reviewed. If I had to do it over again, I'd pick this one first. The author was a teacher and more than just a recorder of events. He was a gifted writer and master storyteller who was never deluded for a moment about what was going to happen and who never lost sight of the universal perspective. He writes in a wry, almost sarcastic style that makes his point effectively as he blasts the Nazis, Polish and Jewish collaborators, corruption in the ghetto, etc. He had me asking myself deep questions as I was reading. He constantly refers to the Nazis he encounters as stupid people. It shows how dangerous stupid people can be when given power. At one point, he says cruelty is a sickness that can affect whole communities and even entire nations. You see from his writings how contagious a sickness it is, and the more that violent, sadistic, atrocious behavior is permitted, the more it occurs. He vividly shows what can happen when people lose their sense of outrage. He knew what was going on at Sobibor and Treblinka and that the people being "resettled" were not coming back. He never trusted the Nazis, saying only evil can come from evil people. Who can argue with that when you are talking about people who lied up to the minute they closed the door of the gas chamber behind you? The last line in the book is "If I am taken, what will become of my diary?" He was not afraid of dying, but afraid that all his effort would be wasted. Well, it wasn't wasted. If only one more person reads this book on the basis of this review, I'll feel I have done my belated bit for a man who had real guts and unfortunately didn't live to see the ultimate survival of his people.

A penetrating report of Nazi destruction of Warsaw's Jewry.

Kaplan's comtemporaneous recording of the destruction of the Jewish community in Warsaw, starting with the Nazi invasion of Poland is most gripping and compelling. It is most interesting because it was written without the "benefit" of other purported historical accounts or the need to explain why the Nazis acted as they did. Although Kapaln has a perspective and knows he is writing for history, his maniscript is mostly reportorial. When he is providing his opinion, rather than telling what actually happened that day, Kaplan let's the reader know.How refreshing to be able to read an historical work, without the "spin" that now accompanies most works about the Nazi occupation of conquered lands and the extermination of the Jews of Europe. This book is must reading for both serious scholars and those who are interested in the subject matter.
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