Description
After the war, Felix Weinberg decided to suppress his memories and not look back in order to move forward. Few would believe that a respected scientist and university professor of physics had gone through the hell of concentration camps as a teenage boy and survived the death march. After sixty-five years, he dared to write down his story, but he did so with unexpected detachment. Only then could he return to the events that took away his beloved mother, little brother, and all other relatives. He was left with only his father, who had been stuck in England before the occupation of Czechoslovakia. Together, they eventually built a new life there. I had a very happy childhood. However, it ended too soon and too cruelly because of Adolf Hitler, but I believe that childhood is what matters most. Memories of it create a kind of shell of safety and joy in the mind, into which one can retreat in times of suffering. My shell was full of beautiful memories and the certainty that my loved ones adored and loved me.
Information
Author: Weinberg Felix
Language: Czech
Publication date: May 11, 2020
Manufacturer: GRADA Publishing, a. s.
Genres: Non-fiction literature, Historical figures, Non-fiction literature, Books, Fiction, History and facts, Biographies and autobiographies
Type: Hardcover books
Pages: 200
ISBN/EAN: 9788027113705

