Hiding in Holland

Hiding in Holland

A Resistance Memoir

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.

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About the Book

The authors of this striking memoir, Hiding in Holland, survivor Max Rothschild and his daughter Shulamit Reinharz, tell the story of a Jewish man who saved his life repeatedly during the Holocaust, eventually being hidden by Dutch Righteous Gentiles for three years. Hiding in Holland presents Max’s roller-coaster ride of living and almost dying in Holland, exploring in depth what it meant to be an onderduiker. What was it like to hide in a brothel or with someone you didn’t like? What was it like to switch hiding locations repeatedly? How did outsiders help? How did hiders deal with Nazi raids? And how did Max retain his sanity?

Max answers these questions by offering a new definition of “resistance” understood in terms of the Jewish person’s experience. Shulamit introduces historical contexts that challenge the exaggerated stereotypes of the valorous Dutch. Together, this inner and outer perspective helps explain why the Netherlands had the worst record of Jewish annihilation of all Western European countries. Only now are Dutch government leaders acknowledging the truth.

Launch: 17 June 2024

Details
Author:
Series: Holocaust Survivor True Stories
Genre: Holocaust
Tags: Foreign Rights Available, Soon to be released
ISBN: 9789493322707
List Price: $19,95
eBook Price: $5,99
About the Author
Shulamit Reinharz

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.

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