Memoirs of a Jewish Journalist in Nazi Germany.
CHEAP,Discount,Buy,Sale,Bestsellers,Good,For,REVIEW, Memoirs of a Jewish Journalist in Nazi Germany.,Wholesale,Promotions,Shopping,Shipping,Memoirs of a Jewish Journalist in Nazi Germany.,BestSelling,Off,Savings,Gifts,Cool,Hot,Top,Sellers,Overview,Specifications,Feature,on sale,Memoirs of a Jewish Journalist in Nazi Germany. Memoirs of a Jewish Journalist in Nazi Germany.
Memoirs of a Jewish Journalist in Nazi Germany. Overview
My late father, Werner Ludwig Schlesinger, was working at the German Law Courts in 1933 when the brown shirts 'gave him the hiding of his life' and told him that Jews were not permitted to work in government anymore. Fortunately, he had a double degree with his other degree being in journalism. These are his memoirs of that time. Being only one of three Jewish Journalists in Berlin with the papers required to be a Jewish journalist, he often signed off on work for other Jewish journalists. During that time, he witnessed Einstein's farewell speech when he left Germany and also witnessed the first experiments on rockets. The contents of the books were first published, in a series of articles, in 1973 in South Africa, England, and the US. Today, these memoirs are as poignant as they were when they were first written.
Memoirs of a Jewish Journalist in Nazi Germany. Specifications
My late father, Werner Ludwig Schlesinger, was working at the German Law Courts in 1933 when the brown shirts 'gave him the hiding of his life' and told him that Jews were not permitted to work in government anymore. Fortunately, he had a double degree with his other degree being in journalism. These are his memoirs of that time. Being only one of three Jewish Journalists in Berlin with the papers required to be a Jewish journalist, he often signed off on work for other Jewish journalists. During that time, he witnessed Einstein's farewell speech when he left Germany and also witnessed the first experiments on rockets. The contents of the books were first published, in a series of articles, in 1973 in South Africa, England, and the US. Today, these memoirs are as poignant as they were when they were first written.