Memoirs of a Jewish Prisoner of the Gulag bookcover

Memoirs of a Jewish Prisoner of the Gulag

Zvi Preigerzon 

(Author)

Alex Lahav 

(Editor)
4.9/5.0
21,000+ Reviews
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Description

One of the first ever eyewitness accounts of the harsh reality of Soviet Gulag

Product Details

PublisherCherry Orchard Books
Publish DateSeptember 27, 2022
Pages244
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook iconPaperback / softback
EAN/UPC9781644699041
Dimensions8.9 X 6.0 X 0.7 inches | 3.0 pounds

About the Author

Zvi Preigerzon (1900-1969) was a Hebrew writer, who lived in the USSR. He was imprisoned in the Gulag for his Zionist views and writings about the life of Jews in the USSR and their suffering during the Holocaust. He is the author of When the Menorah Fades and several other books, short stories, and poems.

Reviews

"This memoir, covering the author's years in and out of labor and prison camps up to his release in 1955, describes the oppressive network of the Gulag; its social hierarchies, whose prisoners ranged from hardened criminals to Party members; and his relationships with Jews of every stripe, from former student radicals to Lubavitcher Chassidim... [T]he author's heartfelt style shines through. His love of heritage is expressed in modern Hebrew language and literature, and his straightforward prose shows a certain innocence, as well as acceptance of the society around him. ... [A] fascinatingly human glimpse into a world perceived as soulless, as well as testament to a painful Russian legacy..."

- Hallie Cantor, AJL News & Reviews


"Few of the millions of men and women who survived the Gulag were able to leave a record of what they had witnessed and endured. Such memoirs are a testament to the writer's courage as well as an invaluable source on one of the great horrors of the twentieth century. Arrested on a trumped-up charge in 1949, Zvi Preigerzon, a respected professor of mineralogy and a published Hebrew writer and poet, was tortured by the secret police and subsequently spent several years in some of the most terrible camps in the Soviet penal system until his release after the death of the dictator Stalin. Preigerzon's reminiscences, composed in spare but highly descriptive prose and beautifully translated by his grandson, contain moving descriptions of the author's struggle to retain his religious and professional identity under the most brutal of circumstances. Vivid portraits of the people, good, evil, and fair-to-middling, he met behind the barbed wire and stories of covert and overt acts of resistance by the author and his fellow prisoners round off this epic account of how one man's spirit triumphed over rampant, pervasive ideological evil."

-- Richard Tempest, Professor, Department of Slavic Languages, University of Illinois

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