1st Edition

When the World Closed Its Doors Struggling to Escape Nazi-occupied Europe

    200 Pages
    by Routledge

    200 Pages
    by Routledge

    "[A] memoir of one couple's escape from the Nazis ...[full of] ingenuity and determination." Michael R. Marrus, Professor of Holocaust Studies, University of Toronto At the beginning of World War II, the US and other countries erected a "paper wall"-- a bureaucratic maze that prevented all but a small number of Jewish refugees from emigrating from Nazi-Occupied Europe.When the World Closed Its Doors tells the true story of a young couple who, like many European Jews, were caught between the Nazis and the "paper wall". Ida Piller-Greenspan was married in Belgium on May 9, 1940. That night the Nazis invaded Belgium. She and her new husband survived the next four months hitchhiking through occupied territory, hiding in barns and tunnels, dodging bombs near Dunkirk, crossing the Pyrenees on foot, and enduring weeks with little food and no money. Ultimately they arrived in Portugal, certain they would find sanctuary somewhere in the world beyond Europe's borders. But their trials were not over. It took nine anxious months for them to find a country that would let them in -- months spent watching in horror as most refugees were forced back to uncertain lives in their home countries. Forty years later, Ida, an accomplished artist, created a pictorial diary of their journey. Her prints -- lyrical, haunting, and compelling -- are accompanied by a page-turning narrative that bears witness to this treacherous and largely forgotten chapter of World War II history.

    Chapter 1 We Dance at Our Wedding; Chapter 2 Jolted Awake; Chapter 3 Almost Arrested; Chapter 4 Escape by Train; Chapter 5 The Castle; Chapter 6 Toward La Panne, near Dunkirk; Chapter 7 Return to Antwerp; Chapter 8 Surviving under the Nazis; Chapter 9 Advice and Dissent; Chapter 10 Unpleasant Surprises in Paris; Chapter 11 Finding Shelter; Chapter 12 Over the Mountains; Chapter 13 Night in a Strange Hotel; Chapter 14 Visa Maze; Chapter 15 Escape; Chapter 16 Hopes Dashed; Chapter 17 The Train from Berlin; Chapter 18 Reprieve;

    Biography

    Piller-Greenspan, Ida; Branting, Susan M.

    “Leaving abstractions and historical generalizations for others, this memoir of one couple's escape from the Nazis' clutches reminds us of concrete factors that saved Jews in Hitler's Europe: ingenuity and determination; getting to the right place at the right time ; receiving help at strategic moments; but most of all, sheer good luck.”
    —Michael R. Marrus, Professor of Holocaust Studies, University of Toronto