An Odyssey Of Survival

An Odyssey Of Survival

by Michael Klein
An Odyssey Of Survival

An Odyssey Of Survival

by Michael Klein

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$9.95 

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Overview

This book describes how Michael Klein's faith and determination helped him to survive the concentration camps at age 15 and overcome bitterness, the trauma of the Holocaust, and all physical and spiritual obstacles, to become a happy and useful member of society. Dr. Klein portrays the Jews' spiritual resistance to the Germans and their struggle to retain their faith and humanity in the shadow of death. He then portrays his personal struggle back to a normal life, not only the struggle for health and an education, but also to reconcile the tension between the world of a Chassidic teenage boy and the experience of surviving the Nazi death camps. Dr. Klein writes about the events that led to his life being saved by a decision of Oskar Schindler, the German industrialist credited with saving the lives of many Jews, and reveals his Yom Kippur experience that prompted him to "breaking silence" and tell what happened in the camps. Dr. Klein was imprisoned in Auschwitz and Golleschau. After liberation, Dr. Klein spent years recovering from TB. In 1950, he made his way to the United States where he was able to earn a degree in Engineering-Physics at the University of Colorado. He earned his Ph.D in Theoretical Physics at Cornell University in 1962.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940016409078
Publisher: MAZO PUBLISHERS
Publication date: 05/06/2006
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 208
File size: 349 KB

About the Author

Michael Klein was born into the family of a Chassidic rabbi in a small town in southern Hungary. His secular education ended at sixth grade, but he continued to study at the Yeshiva until the age of 14, when the Germans occupied Hungary in 1944. He had just turned 15 when he was deported with his parents and ten brothers and sisters to the Ghetto, and then to Auschwitz. Only the author and two older sisters survived.
By the time the war ended, the author was seriously ill with tuberculosis. He spent the next six years in tuberculosis hospitals, during which time he struggled not only to stay alive, but also to educate himself, studying English, German, Mathematics and Physics on his own. Finally, in 1952, he entered the University of Colorado, majored in Engineering-Physics, and graduated first in his class. He earned his Ph.D. in Theoretical Physics at Cornell University in 1962, became a professor of Physics, and published scores of scientific articles.

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