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Dancing on a Powder Keg

ISBN: 9781933480398
Binding: Hardcover
Author: Ilse Weber (Author) and Translated by Michal Schwartz
Trim: 6 x 9 inches
Published: 1/15/2017

Endorsed by Yad Vashem the World Holocaust Remembrance Center as a unique document with literary value Ilse Weber's letters and poems 1933 -1944 record with vivid immediacy the lives of her small family during a time of increasing danger when Europe descended from peace to the chaos of war and genocide. Ilse wrote to her Swedish friend Lilian who lived in London and from 1939 also to her older son whom the Webers sent to Lilian on a Kindertransport. In 1942 Ilse her husband and younger son were deported to the Thersienstadt ghetto. Working there in the children's infirmary Ilse eased the daily suffering of her patients and fellow inmates with songs she wrote and set to music accompanying herself on her contraband guitar. These more than 60 songs and poems that trace Ilse's last years have been performed by various artists and ensembles from around the world having become symbols of ghetto life under Nazi occupation.

Translated from the German and Foreword by Michal Schwartz

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Ilse Weber was born in1903 in VĆ­tkovice in northern Czechoslovakia. A Jewish poet she wrote in German and published children's books and radio scripts. In 1930 she married Willi Weber. In 1931 she gave birth to her first son HanusĢŒ and in 1934 to Tommy. In 1938 Hitler's Third Reich annexed VĆ­tkovice and soon after it occupied all of Czechoslovakia. In the spring of 1939 the Webers sent HanusĢŒ with a Kindertransport to England. In 1942 Ilse Willi and Tommy were deported to the Theresienstadt ghetto. Ilse worked there with sick children and in 1944 as the entire infirmary was deported she refused to abandon the children and voluntarily registered to the transport to Auschwitz where she and her younger son were murdered. Ilse's husband survived and retrieved her poems. The letters were fortuitously discovered decades later when a London attic was emptied.

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"This sobering respectful collection brings a haunting legacy out of the viciousness of the war.

Dancing on a Powder Keg elucidates one Jewish woman's experience in Czechoslovakia during the Holocaust. Translated from the German by Michal Schwartz Ilse Weber's brave reflections reveal the effort to keep artistic practice alive while raising young children in dark times. Historic unsettling and beautifully composed these writings add a crucial note to existing scholarship on the Holocaust.

A writer for radio lyricist children's book author and later a nurse on the children's ward at the Theresienstadt concentration camp (which was also called the Theresienstadt Ghetto) Weber turns everyday events into lively descriptions through letters that span 1933 -1944. The majority are written to Weber's friend in England Lilian Lilian's mother Gertrude who sheltered Weber's eldest son in Sweden during the war and to her son. Germany's growing threat is drawn through mentions of scarce finances the plights of friends pogroms and divisions among the Czech people and all while Weber persisted with household duties. Affectionate portraits of her children rapidly give way to accounts of anti-Semitism and fear. In the absence of Lilian's replies these letters become a personal record of losing freedom and keeping faith. Questions linger unanswered. They build with urgency turn briefer and rarer then suddenly cease.

A useful note by Ruth Bondy on Theresienstadt and an afterword by Ulrike Migdal provide background. Biographical details and the story of how Weber's writings were preserved add necessary context. The account of her surviving son HanusĢŒ is particularly fine. It balances between the tragedy of a young son who was separated from his family-and who at the time remained unaware of their ordeal in the camps-and the adult who later learned the truth. It's here in the unspoken weight of such knowledge that the full impact of Weber's death comes to rest.

Weber was known for her compassion toward children in the camp. Her lullabies and poetry portray their longing with staunch intelligence. Spare images depict the pain of imprisonment and horror of transports even as they hope for an end to suffering. This sobering respectful collection brings a haunting legacy out of the viciousness of the war." - Karen Rigby, Foreward Reviews

Disclosure: This article is not an endorsement but a review. The author of this book provided free copies of the book to have their book reviewed by a professional reviewer. No fee was paid by the author for this review. Foreword Reviews only recommends books that we love. Foreword Magazine Inc. is disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission's 16 CFR Part 255.

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From the back cover:

"The literature about Theresienstadt (Terezin) and the fate of Czech Jewry during the Holocaust is voluminous but Ilse Weber's story is unique. A tremendously gifted young woman a poetess and musician a son who is rescued to Britain and Sweden a devoted husband and many of whose wonderful poems have been miraculously rescued form a unique testimony. Ilse Weber worked as a nurse in a children's sick-room in Theresienstadt and refused to abandon her charges when they were transported to Auschwitz. Miraculously again her last spoken words at the entrance to the gas chamber were preserved. Her husband survived and her older son finally made this publication possible. I have read many accounts but this account by someone who did not survive and whose story has been reconstructed is exceptional." - Prof. Yehuda Bauer academic adviser to Yad Vashem academic adviser to the Task Force for International Cooperation on Holocaust Education Remembrance and Research and senior adviser to the Swedish Government on the International Forum on Genocide Prevention.

Of the numerous reviews for Ilse Weber's letters and poems' German edition below is a translated selection of the most significant German-language newspapers.

"...Ilse's charismatic and helpful personality made these poems not only popular but for many inmates they became more important than "water and bread " as they restored their courage to face life pride and hope... the book's story and the fate of its protagonists finally wrested from oblivion,,, is absolutely touching... it necessitates a filming of Ilse Weber's life... it must be recognized by future generations as one of the most important testimonies of the Shoa." - Florian Hunger JĆ¼mldische Zeitung

"...with her smuggled guitar this charismatic woman made music secretly half night through... Ilse became a legendary figure among the survivors of Theresienstadt." - Oliver Pfohlmann Neue ZĆ¼mlrcher Zeitung

"Reading these [letters ] today one remains speechless. Likewise the straightforward and visually expressive poems. They present themselves without flourish and embellishment and for that they are gripping." - Roland Maurer Der Kleine Bund ZĆ¼mlruch

"...even today 60 years after the horrible events&hellip Ilse Weber's letters and poems... manifest the fate of an individual in dark times... get 'under our skin.'" - Hugo Ernst KƤumlufer Westdeutsche Allgemeine Zeitung.

"Letters written to a best friend are something very personal. One confides things one doesn't dare say loud one is even afraid to think. I read Ilse's letters and at times couldn't hold back the tears: not because this young educated woman was maudlin but because I could not stop the calamity. To hope that the course of events would suddenly change is of course naĆÆve but one must have hope when we get so close to this woman get to know her..." - Stefanie Nannen Hamburger Abendblatt.

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