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Description:
Don't come looking to these books for your Monday pick-me-up…unless a good cry really does a lot to lift your spirits. Seriously, we warned you.
Transcript
- 00:04
Survivor Memoirs, a la Shmoop. Let's get one thing straight... survivor memoirs
- 00:08
aren't in-depth looks at the lives of former reality television stars. Although we're
- 00:13
sure those would be fascinating as well...
- 00:16
Rather, survivor memoirs are works by people who either survived a concentration camp,
- 00:22
or who based their stories on the experiences of someone who did. We're talking REAL survivors.
Full Transcript
- 00:28
The important thing to remember is that, no matter what Mahmoud Ahmadinejad <<mah-mood
- 00:33
ah-mah-DIH-nee-zhahd>> says...
- 00:34
...these works, and the Holocaust they recount, aren't fiction.
- 00:40
Let's start with Elie Wiesel's memoir, Night. Wiesel was deported to Auschwitz in 1944,
- 00:48
along with every other Jew in his hometown.
- 00:51
Wiesel, however, not only survived Auschwitz, but a death march to Dachau<<da-COW>>. Eventually,
- 00:57
he became a journalist. The first version of Night was published in
- 01:00
Yiddish and was over 900 pages long. Just be thankful you don't have to read that version...
- 01:03
Wiesel later edited his memoir down to a much, much shorter text. Granted, even the abridged
- 01:08
version of Night didn't sell many copies at first, because the Holocaust makes for a depressing
- 01:13
read.
- 01:13
By 1997, however, Night was selling about 300,000 copies a year, and that was before
- 01:18
Oprah picked it for her book club and passed out copies to her audience.
- 01:22
In 1986, Weisel also won the Nobel Peace Prize for his work against violence and racism.
- 01:29
Another famous memoir was written by Primo Levi<<Pree-mo leh-vee>> who was born in Italy
- 01:33
in 1919. Levi was extraordinarily smart and, despite rampant prejudice against Jews, he
- 01:39
was allowed to study chemistry at the university in Turin.
- 01:42
Unfortunately, by the time Levi graduated, Italy had officially become the sniveling
- 01:47
minion to Germany's big, nasty bully. In 1943, Levi joined the Italian resistance
- 01:54
movement. He was really bad at it...
- 01:57
...like, really bad...
- 01:58
...and was quickly arrested by the Germans. He admitted to being Jewish in order to avoid
- 02:03
being shot, and was sent to Auschwitz.
- 02:05
The end result was his memoir Survival in Auschwitz, which he wrote shortly after his
- 02:10
release from the camp in 1945. Maus, by Art Spiegelman, is different from
- 02:16
both Night and Survival in Auschwitz in two major ways. Its author was never in a concentration
- 02:21
camp... and Maus is a graphic novel.
- 02:25
Spiegelman's parents were Polish Jews, who came to New York after World War Two. Their
- 02:30
story is the one Spiegelman relates in Maus. Originally a three-page strip for an underground
- 02:32
series of comics called Funny Animals, the first volume of Maus came out in 1986. It
- 02:36
proved incredibly popular, and a second volume came out in 1991.
- 02:41
In 1992, Spiegelman won a special Pulitzer Prize for Maus. Since then, the graphic novel
- 02:47
has become a serious form of art, helped along by Spiegelman's success in tackling a topic
- 02:52
as difficult as the Holocaust. Another memoir was written by Simon Wiesenthal<<wise-en-thall>>,
- 02:58
Nazi hunter. Seriously... that was his job.
- 03:08
After World War Two ended and Wiesenthal was released from Mauthausen<<mout-house-en>>,
- 03:12
he immediately became involved in tracking down, arresting, and trying Nazi war criminals.
- 03:17
He also founded the Jewish Documentation Center in Vienna, which has tracked down hundreds
- 03:21
of Nazi war criminals, many of whom escaped to places like South America.
- 03:26
His memoir, The Sunflower, is probably less factual than some of the other books you're
- 03:34
going to read...
- 03:35
...but when fact is as gruesome as the Holocaust was...
- 03:38
...sometimes a little fiction can be a welcome device.
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