A Prodigy in Auschwitz: Simon (A Holocaust Story, Book #1) by Fred Raymond Goldman
Publisher: Historium Press
Pages: 368
When Nazi Germany troops enter Krakow, Poland on September 2, 1939, fourteen-year-old Simon Baron learns two truths that have been hidden from him.
One, the people who have raised him are not his biological parents. Two, his birth mother was Jewish. In the eyes of the Germans, although he has been raised Catholic, this makes Simon Jewish. Simon's dreams of becoming a concert violinist and composer are dashed when his school is forced to expel him, and he is no longer eligible to represent it at its annual Poland Independence Day Concert. There, he had hoped to draw the attention of representatives of a prestigious contest who might have helped him fulfill his dreams.
Simon vows to never forgive his birth father for abandoning him, an act resulting in unspeakable tragedies for his family and in his being forced to live the indignities of the ghetto and the horrors of Auschwitz and Sachsenhausen concentration camps.
Throughout his ordeals, Simon wavers between his intense anger toward his birth father and his dreams of being reunited with him. Through his relationships with Rabbi Rosenschtein and the rabbi's daughter, Rachel, Simon comes to appreciate his Jewish heritage and find purpose in his life. Driven by devotion to family and friends and his passion for music, Simon holds on to hope. But can he survive the atrocities of the Nazi regime?
How do you reconcile a decision you made in the past when the world erupts in war, threatening the life of someone you love and believe you were protecting?
Excerpt
In October 1942, additional deportations of Jews to the ghetto began. Each deportation resulted in a reduction of the area comprising the ghetto. As the area decreased, the ghetto became more crowded by the Nazis requiring Jewish residents from twenty-nine surrounding villages to move into its confines. This resulted in the Rosenschtein children and Simon being forced to share their apartment with two other families.
Conditions in the ghetto became more horrific. Food became scarcer. With no medical attention, people were dying of starvation and disease. Corpses lay on the streets, ignored. Body collectors and grave diggers became overworked and stressed from hunger and exhaustion. Simon passed beggars on the streets on his way to and from work and blessed the fact that he, Rachel, and her brothers were doing better than many others, thanks to Rachel continuing to work at the sewing factory and he and the boys keeping their work assignments. But the suffering of others wore on him, and he began to question how God could allow such things to happen.
In early December 1942, the Germans divided the ghetto into two parts. Ghetto A was for people able to work. Ghetto B was for everyone else. Rachel, her brothers, and Simon lived in ghetto A. They now shared an apartment with three other families. Soon the German invaders sent many of those remaining in the ghetto to the Belzec concentration camp.
Thank you so much for hosting Fred Raymond Goldman today, with a moving excerpt from his evocative novel, A Prodigy in Auschwitz: Simon.
ReplyDeleteTake care,
Cathie xx
The Coffee Pot Book Club