Not Even a Number
Surviving Larger C - Auschwitz II - Birkenau
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Narrated by:
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Kay Webster
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By:
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Edith Perl
About this listen
Rifcha and her family were living normal, happy lives. There was school, work, family dinners, outings and vacations. That was until 1938 when the first bit of turmoil started to hit their village located in the Sub-Carpathian mountains - anti-Semitism started running rampant like a disease. It began taking ahold of everyone around them. Those who were once friends now became vicious enemies. Rifcha began to realize that her world was about to crumble.
On April 18, 1944, Rifcha and her family were ripped from their home and taken by gunpoint to the Mukacheve Ghetto. The conditions were harsh and virulent but the entire family was alive and together. Their stay in Mukacheve Ghetto was brief. One month later they were loaded into cattle cars and taken to Auschwitz II- Birkeneu.
Selections were made as soon as the family was pulled from the train. There were no last hugs. No good-byes. As Rifcha's mother and her youngest siblings were being torn away and taken to their final death march, Rifcha's mother made her promise to take care of her sisters, to survive and to make sure she told the world of the atrocities of the Holocaust. At the gates of Auschwitz, Rifcha decided to become someone new. She gave herself a new name: Edita with the meaning: Spoils of war.
Over a million people, lost their lives in Auschwitz II - Birkenau, mostly in gas chambers; today, it is the world's largest Jewish graveyard. At the height of the selections, the murders would peak at 10,000 a day. This camp was home to Dr. Josef Mengele. This was where he did all of his medical experiments. Edita fell prey to Dr. Mengele several times, even becoming victim to his knife, which ended up saving her life. When selections were being made for the eviction of Auschwitz-Birkenau II, Edita once
©2016, 2017 Motivational Press (P)2017 Motivational PressWhat listeners say about Not Even a Number
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Overall
- pattrine
- 15-01-20
tale where love and resolve triumphed against the odds
The reader's accent and voice generally - the inflexions, sudden raising of pitch, heavy stresses on some syllables - made listening quite hard to bear at times. Otherwise it would have got a 5 star score The story itself was never dull and held your attention. The reader could use their own imaginations of the scenes being d.epicted without the reader having to describe in minute detail what was going on. The images were powerful allowing you to share the author's experience - alwAys a good measure of a good read/book.
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2 people found this helpful
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- Janet Jones
- 14-12-19
Gripping and harrowing story.
A very gripping and harrowing story of the struggles that she endured and the strength she had to survive. The narrator wasn't very good specially with some of her pronunciations but nobody is perfect.
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1 person found this helpful
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- Morag Janet Davies
- 22-01-20
astonishing
true story amazing. how someone can survive. people don't realise the struggle after the war.
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- Anonymous User
- 08-01-19
Harrowing but addictive read.
Very incite full. Great read, hard going at parts due to the sad nature but worth continuing. Inspiring.
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3 people found this helpful
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- Amazon Customer
- 18-10-20
KJL
A moving account of a remarkable story of one woman’s fight to save what was left of her family and ultimately the determination to survive. Beautifully narrated
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- Athina
- 13-08-20
wow what a story
I cried with her I was happy that she survived and found a happily ever after.
what these poor souls had to go through and the sheer willpower to stay alive is unimaginable.
I pray that something like this will never ever happen..
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- Anonymous User
- 02-02-20
story of a survivour
A great story who suffers deeply for the made up eastern europien accent wich is so utterly disturbing while listening.
I am from Europe myself and this added nothing to the story except it became hard to understand the reading.
The story, I am going to search for with another narrator or just read it myself.
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4 people found this helpful
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- Peter O'Sullivan
- 21-12-20
The listening experience is terrible
Quite simply, the entire listening experience is ruined by the narrator - it is very hard to listen to due to the narrators very heavy accent. The accent seemed very contrived and labored. The experience of the author is very compelling and I am almost through it but the narration makes very heavy weather of it. Could be and should be an entirely different experience.
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1 person found this helpful
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- Anonymous User
- 25-11-20
OFFENSIVE NARRATOR
I was born in former Czechoslovakia, I moved up to Scotland in my mid twenties, I am angered by the made up exaggerated artificial put on eastern european accent of Kay Webster which makes the narrator sound mentally retarded (perception she ultimately applied to all Eastern Europeans) and in the end spoils the entire story and its natural flow. This is culturally inappropriate borderline comparable to white actors painting themselves black to fit role of a person of colour. SHE DESTROYED THE STORY in her stereotypical approach, let alone she didn't trouble herself to look up the correct pronunciation of geographic areas, names and surnames. The story has its own message that could and should be conveyed in normal spoken english. IT'S DISRESPCTFUL to the survivor's story and listeners....SHOCKING EMBARASSING UNNECCESSARY SHAMEFUL will be returning this title...
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9 people found this helpful