Description:
One of the lucky few! In this riveting memoir, daughter (Shulamit Reinharz) and father (Max Rothschild) join forces to explain how Max resisted and outlived the Nazi-occupation of Holland.
Brief description: Born in Amsterdam in 1946 to German-Jewish Holocaust survivors, Shulamit Reinharz is the Brandeis University Jacob Potofsky Professor Emerita of Sociology and a Research Fellow in International Studies at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford University.She is the former director of the Brandeis University Women's Studies Program, founder of the Women's Studies Research Center, the Hadassah-Brandeis Institute for the Study of Jews and Gender, and Kniznick Gallery of Feminist Art.The author of 17 books, her topics have ranged from On Becoming a Social Scientist (1979) and Feminist Methods in Social Research (1992) to American Jewish Women and the Zionist Enterprise (2005), Jewish Intermarriage around the World (2009), and One Hundred Years of Kibbutz Life: A Century of Crises and Reinvention (2011), and 100 Jewish Brides: Stories from Around the World (co-edited with Barbara Vinick) (2024).Prof. Reinharz received the 2024 Leo Baeck Medal for "contributions to scholarship and community leadership," the highest honor bestowed by the Leo Baeck Institute for the study of German-Jewish history and culture.
Review Quotes:
Having myself grown up in a Dutch environment of people who were fortunate to survive the German occupation, I find this an exceptionally touching and profound diary, written in the precarious confinement of hiding, by a man who was able to look backwards and forwards remaining true to his humanist and socialist ideals, and optimistically philosophizing on how to change the world after the war. - Tamar Kupferschmidt-Klipstein, Haifa
"Just make sure you survive!" His mother's deathbed admonition rang in twelve-year-old Max Rothschild's ears ever after. And survive he did - through the Nazis' valley of death and against all odds. Max's memoir, incorporating a wartime diary and letters, has been edited with filial devotion and scrupulous integrity by his daughter. It conveys the everyday obscenities of life in hiding in occupied Holland with granular precision. This is historical testimony of the highest order.- Bernard Wasserstein, Chicago and Amsterdam
Professor Shulamit Reinharz's newest book, Hiding in Holland: A Resistance Memoir, is an innovative and important historical conteibution to understanding the Holocaust, especially in the Netherlands, presented in a unique and ingenious manner. Unlike more conventional Holocaust memoirs, it intertwines her father's fascinating and determinied houthful experiences and survival techniques with the trenchant historical contextualization of a distinguished sociologist and Brandeis Professor Emerita, helping clarify misconceptions about Jewish resistance providing new revelations about both the Nazi occupation and the Dutch responses in Holland. Essential and engrossing reading for the general public as well as Holocaust scholars today. - Dr. Jud Newborn, Founding HIstorian, New York's Museum of Jewish Heritage - A Living Memorial to the Holocaust (1986-2000).
As an historian and former citizen of the small Franconian town where Shulamit's grandfather worked as a doctor and her father was born, I highly recommend Hiding in Holland as a very important read. In our world of persecution, expulsion and threat of life to everybody who is "unwanted," you will find out here what that means for an individual life. A deeply human, instructive and stirring book. - Thomas Medicus, Berlin, Germany