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What Time and Sadness Spared: Mother and Son Confront the Holocaust [Hardcover]

Roma Nutkiewicz Ben-Atar (Author), Doron S. Ben-Atar (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

February 23, 2006

Roma Ben-Atar resisted until late in life the urging of her family to share the memories of her Nazi-era experiences. The Holocaust exerted a dark pressure on all of their lives but was never openly discussed. It was only when her granddaughter insisted on hearing the whole truth, with a directness partly generational, that Mrs. Ben-Atar agreed to tell her story.

What Time and Sadness Spared is a journey of both loss and endurance, moving with shocking speed from a carefree adolescence in upper-middle-class Warsaw to the horrors of the Final Solution. The young girl sees her neighborhood transformed into a ghetto populated by skeletal figures both alive and dead. Unbelievably, things only grow worse as this ruin gives way to the death factories of Majdanek and Auschwitz and the death marches of 1945. Life in the camps changes her in less than a day, as if "the person in my body was a stranger I had never met." Her only consolation is to lie on her wooden bunk, no mattress, and speak to the soul of her mother, who, like virtually her entire family, had already been swept away. Roma must summon astonishing powers of adaptation simply to survive, bringing her finally through the wreckage of postwar Europe and to an entirely new life in Israel.

In this unique family collaboration Roma Ben-Atar's son Doron, a historian who brings with him fluency in psychoanalysis, contributes through his commentary an awareness of the difficulties presented by historical narrative and memory. A visitor to the much-changed sites in which his mother grew up and was interned by the Nazis, he also voices the perspective of the survivors' children and their ambivalence over being "protected" from this past. As the generation that endured the camps passes from this world, What Time and Sadness Spared illustrates with particular urgency the historical responsibilities of the survivors' descendants, who must become the new vessels for a story that will not remain alive on its own but demands our courage and curiosity.


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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

Doron Ben-Atar points out in the prologue that this book is a collaboration between a Holocaust survivor and her historian son. Roma Ben-Atar came from an upper-middle- class Ashkenazi Jewish family in Warsaw and experienced the terror of concentration camps. On September 26, 1939, the Germans entered Warsaw, and Roma Ben-Atar relives the changes into a living hell of fear, hunger, and death. She relates the horrors of the camps and the Warsaw Ghetto. "The Nazis tormented and killed us in plain sight of the residents of Lublin." She was then sent to a camp when she was 16, there wavering between acceptance of death and an irrational hope that she would "somehow survive this ordeal and rebuild a life." This remarkable book is a narrative of things that happened to a young girl told by an older woman. There are the memories themselves, there are the mother's recollections of what she thought as she went through the events, and there are the reflections of a mature woman about how she coped. George Cohen
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review

"There is a flood of memoirs about the Nazi period and survivors in print today. Well, this is not 'just one more.' This book stands out from the literature. It has an eloquent statement by one survivor, which is by itself powerful. But it also has (and this is where the text is really unique) the commentary of her historian son, who says what needs to be said and leaves to his mother what she is particularly well equipped to say.

(Peter Gay, Yale University, author of My German Question: Growing Up in Nazi Berlin )

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 224 pages
  • Publisher: University of Virginia Press (February 23, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0813925134
  • ISBN-13: 978-0813925134
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.7 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,331,394 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A compelling memoir, April 5, 2006
This review is from: What Time and Sadness Spared: Mother and Son Confront the Holocaust (Hardcover)
The main character in this moving book is a teenaged girl, Roma, who is separated from her affluent family and sent to a concentration camp at the age of 16, where she never knows if she will be in the next group of inmates selected to die in the crematorium. Her only solace from the daily horrors is the imagined conversations she has at night, before going to sleep, with her mother. The story of how she manages to survive with her humanity intact and start a new life in Israel makes for gripping reading; I read this book in one sitting. Especially interesting is the epilogue, where she talks about what it felt like to return to Poland nearly 60 years after she left. Adding to the authenticity of the historical details is the fact that Roma's co-author, her son, is a history professor. He writes about the difficulties faced by himself and his mother in writing about her past. Rather than just telling a story, this book addresses the problem of reconciling memory with historical fact, and what it means to write about your past so many years later.
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