I Will Plant You a Lilac Tree
|
| List Price: | £5.99 |
| Price: | £5.39 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery. Details |
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk
6 new or used available from £2.00
Average customer review:Product Description
"Tell me what you remember most about home," Dick asked me one evening. "A lilac tree," I said. "It bloomed every May, around the time of Mama's birthday. The memory is so vivid in mind, I can almost smell the lilacs now." In 1942 Hannelore Wolff's life changed forever. Her father had been arrested and sent to a concentration camp. Six weeks later he was dead, and Hannelore and the rest of her family were deported to the camps and a life of unbearable suffering. Yet despite the horrors she faced in various labour and concentration camps, including Auschwitz, Hannelore met and fell in love with Polish POW, Dick Hillman. After a few months they were separated, but Dick promised Hannelore that he would find her again, wherever she was. He kept his promise, and when both their names appeared on Oskar Schindler's list, Dick and Hannelore were reunited and married. This is their incredible story of courage, love and hope during one of the most horrific times in history.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #38661 in Books
- Published on: 2006-05-19
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 256 pages
Customer Reviews
Amazing story of courage & survival
Most of you will be familiar with the story of Oskar Schindler and the subsequent movie starring Liam Neeson. This story is of Laura (Hannelore)who became one of the people on that list.
Her life was a happy one prior to the rise of the Nazis in Northern Germany but when they took power and began the inhumane decrees preceding their genocide - Laura's family life began to deteriorate.
Laura writes compellingly - I simply could not put this book down and virtually read it in one sitting. I actually have this on my wishlist as I borrowed it from my library. Now I have to get it.
Laura's story is very much like the others from the Holocaust - so why buy it? Well, as I said, she's one of the Schindler Jews and she didn't automatically go to one of the more well-known Factories of Death. By simple turns of fate and could one say "luck", she ended up being one of the lucky ones taken from Plazow to Brinnlitz.
As Steven Spielberg said in his movie "Shoah", survivors of the Holocaust are now at the very earliest, in their mid to late 70s and slowly one by one they are dying and their stories with them. Each one deserves to be heard because at the end, we feel warmed by their very need to survive and their hollow endings. I feel that we can't say "happy" simply because so very many families were separated and countless numbers of them never saw their loved ones again. I cannot imagine how that would feel because I have tried to make that leap and it's painful for me to imagine.
I would certainly recommend this book for any child studying this period of history in school as it is not written in a heavy style - it's also not a very long book but Laura Hillman engages and pulls you into her story and you feel her pain and joy in equal parts.
Yes, I can recommend this book.




