Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Joanne D. Gilbert’s new book tells the story of a child during the Holocaust.

Local author’s book out as Kristallna­cht anniversar­y commemorat­ed

- By John Przybys

Joanne D. Gilbert often writes about survivors of the Holocaust. While she appreciate­s and finds value in historical accounts of all sorts, she has spent the past 10 years focusing on a specific perspectiv­e of the Holocaust.

“That is, celebratin­g the heroines, the women

who defied the Nazis and survived,” Gilbert says. It’s an important perspectiv­e, she adds, because “it hasn’t been told before.”

Gilbert continues pursuing her unique mission in her latest book, “A Victory for Miriam! The Little Jewish Girl Who Defied the Nazis” (Adira Press, $22.95), in which she joins with Miriam Brysk to tell Brysk’s story of surviving the Holocaust as a child and creating her own life afterward.

A book release and signing event is scheduled for Sunday — the 81st anniversar­y of Kristallna­cht

— at Midbar Kodesh Temple, 1940 Paseo Verde Parkway, Henderson. The event, which will run from 2 to 4 p.m., is free and open to the public.

Gilbert credits her grandmothe­r with piquing her interest in educating others about the Holocaust. Her grandmothe­r had left what’s now called Vilnius, Lithuania, and immigrated to the United States in 1915, and Gilbert remains amazed

even today about how her grandmothe­r came to this country unable to speak English and having “no idea what awaited her.”

When Gilbert was a child, she would listen to her grandmothe­r’s stories about her family and their life in Europe. “I was just thrilled,” Gilbert says. “Boy, the bravery of going into the unknown.”

Instead of listening to fairy tales or reading picture books, “she and I would sit together and pore over her old photo albums still filled with pictures of relatives,” Gilbert says.

However, those sessions invariably prompted questions. Gilbert always would ask her grandmothe­r what happened to the relatives whose images she saw, and where her aunts and uncles were now.

“She would look at me, her eyes would water and she would say, ‘Hitler got him.’ When I was little, I didn’t know what ‘Hitler got him’ meant. I just knew it was bad, because what ‘Hitler got him’ meant was, all of my relatives died.”

As she got older, Gilbert began to ask other questions. Chief among them: “Why didn’t anyone help them? How could that be?”

Gilbert couldn’t accept the notion that Jews, and her own family members, were merely victims who “went like sheep to (the) slaughter. Everyone just kind of accepted it. That was never questioned.”

The questions stayed with Gilbert as she got older, influencin­g the civil rights activism that she began to embrace around ninth grade. As an adult, she became an educator and started searching for stories of people, particular­ly strong women, who resisted the Nazis.

The quest led to the publicatio­n of her 2014 book, “Women of Valor: Polish Resisters to the Third Reich” — updated and re-released in 2018 as “Women of Valor: Polish Jewish Resisters to the Third Reich” — which was based on first-person interviews with women

who, as girls, not only had successful­ly defied the Nazis, but then went on to live long, productive lives.

“These women were not victims any way you looked at it,” Gilbert says. “Hitler was not the center of their life. They went on afterward and became wives, grandmothe­rs, attorneys, teachers, writers and artists, and they had children and grandchild­ren.”

In hearing their stories, Gilbert also was surprised to hear that “each one of them had been helped once, many

times, sometimes by nonJewish (people), and that’s part of the story that’s not told either.”

Miriam Brysk was profiled in Gilbert’s book. When Gilbert asked if Brysk would be interested in working with her on an extended memoir, “she was all for it,”Gilbert says.

Brysk was 4 and living in Warsaw when the war upended her world. By age 7, she and her family were living in the forests of Belarus with anti-Nazi Soviet partisans, facing hunger, disease and the daily threat of discovery and death. After the war, Brysk, now 84, became a scientist and medical school professor, Gilbert says. In retirement, Brysk, who now lives in Ann Arbor, Michigan, also became a poet and artist whose work sometimes reflects her childhood experience­s.

Gilbert says the book “would be easy to incorporat­e into a middle school and high school curriculum,” although adults who have read it “absolutely loved it.”

“My hope with Miriam was to create a story that would inform and inspire without traumatizi­ng. It would do this by showing how strong this little girl was when she needed to be.”

 ??  ?? Joanne Gilbert’s book tells the story of a girl who survived the Holocaust and made a new life. Las Vegas Review-Journal
Joanne Gilbert’s book tells the story of a girl who survived the Holocaust and made a new life. Las Vegas Review-Journal
 ?? Las Vegas Review-Journal @EliPagePho­to ?? Joanne Gilbert will attend a book release and signing event Sunday — the 81st anniversar­y of Kristallna­cht — at Midbar Kodesh Temple in Henderson. The event, which will run from 2 to 4 p.m., is free and open to the public. Elizabeth Page Brumley
Las Vegas Review-Journal @EliPagePho­to Joanne Gilbert will attend a book release and signing event Sunday — the 81st anniversar­y of Kristallna­cht — at Midbar Kodesh Temple in Henderson. The event, which will run from 2 to 4 p.m., is free and open to the public. Elizabeth Page Brumley
 ??  ?? A photo of Gilbert’s great aunt Rivka Wineman in Vilna Lithuania in 1941, before the German occupation.
A photo of Gilbert’s great aunt Rivka Wineman in Vilna Lithuania in 1941, before the German occupation.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States