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I—a Jewess—am by definition not a member of the species, or: why should a Jewess not have problems with public assistance and with her children? The postwar German Jew, to the extent that such a being…
Contributor:
Esther Dischereit
Places:
New York, United States of America
(Berlin, Germany)
Date:
1994
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Today, the Sherit Hapleita has an ideology of its own—this despite the fact that in its outlook on life, in its politics, and its culture, the group is no more unified and no less divided than other…
Contributor:
Samuel Gringauz
Places:
New York City, Allied-occupied Germany
(Germany)
Date:
1947
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Contributor:
Sylvia Plachy
Places:
Dachau, West Germany
(Dachau, Germany)
Date:
1985
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When it came time for me to start school, my mother went to the director of the Wilhelm Pieck School in Katowice, Poland, where we were living then, to register me. My sister, nine years my senior…
Contributor:
Henryk M. Broder
Places:
(Berlin, Germany)
Date:
1979
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Not seldom, when in conversation my partner draws me into a plural—that is, as soon as he includes my person in whatever connection and says to me: “We Jews . . .”—I feel a not exactly tormenting, but…
Contributor:
Jean Améry
Places:
Munich, West Germany
(Germany)
Date:
1966
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Jakob Fandler took uneasy note of the changes in his son. It was as if a stranger he had known for a long time and then banned from his life, had suddenly shown up and moved in with him. He had…
Contributor:
Doron Rabinovici
Date:
1997
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We couldn’t be Jews, my brother finally explained, raising his voice, because our grandmother had not been Jewish, and for Jews only your mother counts. We weren’t even half-Jewish, because our father…
Contributor:
Eva Menasse
Places:
Berlin, Germany
Date:
2005