Left Behind in Nazi Vienna
by
"In 1938, when Hitler annexed Austria, approximately 185,000 Jews were living in Vienna. They had only a short time to make plans to emigrate. While racial policies in Germany took nearly five years to come to fruition, in Austria the …
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"In 1938, when Hitler annexed Austria, approximately 185,000 Jews were living in Vienna. They had only a short time to make plans to emigrate. While racial policies in Germany took nearly five years to come to fruition, in Austria the ruthless exclusion of Jews took five months." "H. Pierre Secher and his parents were among the few Austrian Jews to gain entrance into the United States. The U.S. visa stamped in their passports was the only thing that saved the three from deportation to Poland. The Sechers left behind five family members, but they believed, even as dark rumors circulated, that those left behind would be out of reach of the Nazis." "After a lengthy introduction, the book is a chronological arrangement of the many letters exchanged between the fortunate New Yorkers and five family members in Vienna. The letters give an account of the struggles the latter faced in their efforts to stay alive: only Fanny Secher (the author's paternal grandmother) died a natural death; the others were deported and never heard from again."--BOOK JACKET.
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""In 1938, when Hitler annexed Austria, approximately 185,000 Jews were living in Vienna. They had only a short time to make plans to emigrate. While racial policies in Germany took …"
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