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Paisner Daniel - The Girl in the Green Sweater: A Life in Holocausts Shadow

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Paisner Daniel The Girl in the Green Sweater: A Life in Holocausts Shadow
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The Girl in the Green Sweater: A Life in Holocausts Shadow: summary, description and annotation

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True story from the major motion picture In Darkness, official 2012 Academy Award nominee for Best Foreign Language Film.In 1943, with Lvovs 150,000 Jews having been exiled, killed, or forced into ghettos and facing extermination, a group of Polish Jews daringly sought refuge in the citys sewer system. The last surviving member this group, Krystyna Chiger, shares one of the most intimate, harrowing and ultimately triumphant tales of survival to emerge from the Holocaust. The Girl in the Green Sweater is Chigers harrowing first-person account of the fourteen months she spent with her family in the fetid, underground sewers of Lvov.The Girl in the Green Sweater is also the story of Leopold Socha, the groups unlikely savior. A Polish Catholic and former thief, Socha risked his life to help Chigers underground family survive, bringing them food, medicine, and supplies. A moving memoir of a desperate escape and life under unimaginable circumstances, The Girl in the Green Sweater is ultimately a tale of intimate survival, friendship, and redemption.

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The Girl
in the
Green Sweater

The Girl
in the
Green Sweater

A Life in Holocausts Shadow K RYSTYNA C HIGER with Daniel Paisner ST - photo 1

A Life in
Holocausts Shadow

K RYSTYNA C HIGER
with Daniel Paisner

Picture 2
ST. MARTINS PRESS
New York

THE GIRL IN THE GREEN SWEATER . Copyright 2008 by Kristine Keren. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. For information, address St. Martins Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.

www.stmartins.com

Design by Kathryn Parise

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA

Chiger, Krystyna, 1935

The girl in the green sweater : a life in Holocausts shadow / Krystyna Chiger with Daniel Paisner.1st ed.

p. cm.

ISBN-13: 978-0-312-37656-7

ISBN-10: 0-312-37656-1

1. Chiger, Krystyna, 1935 2. JewsUkraineLvivBiography. 3. Holocaust, Jewish (19391945)UkraineLvivPersonal narratives. 4. Jewish children in the HolocaustUkraineLvivBiography. 5. Lviv (Ukraine)Biography. I. Paisner, Daniel. II. Title.

DS135.U43C533 2008

940.5318092dc22

[B]

2008022521

First Edition: October 2008

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

This book is dedicated to my parents, Paulina and Ignacy Chiger...
may their memories be for a blessing....

Contents

Picture 3

Introduction
YES, I REMEMBER

One
KOPERNIKA 12

Two
THE GIRL IN THE GREEN SWEATER

Three
HERE THE GROUND IS SUFFERING

Four
ESCAPE

Five
OUR LADY OF THE SNOW

Six
ESCAPE, AGAIN

Seven
THE PALACE

Eight
THE PRISONER

Nine
LIBERATION

Ten
WHAT HAPPENED NEXT

Acknowledgments

Picture 4

I t is not an easy thing, to tell the story of a difficult life. I have been fortunate to have many talented professionals help me to tell mine. At St. Martins Press, Nichole Argyres has been a very thorough, very talented, and very enthusiastic editor. Her assistant, Kylah McNeill, has also been very helpful. I appreciate all of their assistance and their many kindnesses, and that of their many fine colleagues at the publishing house. Most of all, I am grateful that they have chosen to help me share my story.

I would also like to thank John Silbersack, my literary agent at Trident Media Group, for believing in this project and strongly supporting it.

Also, I am extremely grateful to my collaborator, Dan Paisner, for his passion, his patience, and his understanding. We spent many long hours together working on this book, going over some very emotional, very painful material, and his encouragement was very important. I do not think I could have told this story so well without his help.

Together, Dan and I would like to thank Rabbi Lee Friedlander, of the Reconstructionist Synagogue of the North Shore in Plandome, New York, for his careful reading of the manuscript and his many insightful comments.

Personally, I am grateful to my familyto my husband, Marian, for his constant love and support, as well as to our children, Doron and Roger, and their spouses, Michele and Jennifer, for their incredible encouragement. I also wish to thank my two grandsons, Jonathan and Daniel, for their genuine interest in my childhood stories, and for asking endless questions and waiting for answers which to them seemed always unbelievable. It is through the telling and retelling of my familys struggle that I have been able to keep these memories alive. This is important. In many ways, it is because of my grandchildren that I was moved to write this book. I am the last survivor of our group of survivors and I recognize that it is my responsibility to tell what happened. If I do not tell it, who will? If I do not remember it, who will? If the stories of our time in the sewer leave this earth untold it will be easier for future generations to suggest that the Holocaust is a myth, that it never happened.

Thank you as well to my many friends who supported me in this very emotional and difficult task. They, too, helped me to nurture these unhappy memories over the years, by asking me to share them, and recognizing that there were times when I could not.

I also want to acknowledge the caring people at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C., for their deep interest in my familys story of survival, and for taking such extreme good care of my precious green sweater that survived together with me for fourteen months in such horrible conditions. In addition, I am very grateful to the curators at the Imperial War Museum in London for permanently exhibiting my familys story there. Thank you as well to the individuals at the Shoah Foundation, under the leadership of Steven Spielberg, for their tireless efforts in establishing a living, breathing visual and audio library of Holocaust survival stories; I am honored that my familys story is included in this important archive, and that it is being made available for teaching programs around the world.

Lastly, I am especially grateful to Dr. Mordecai Paldiel of the Yad Vashem Museum in Jerusalem, for his essential research, and for his role in sharing my story with future generations.

Who has inflicted this upon us? Who has made us Jews different from all other people? Who has allowed us to suffer so terribly up till now? It is God that has made us as we are, but it will be God, too, who will raise us up again. If we bear all this suffering and if there are still Jews left, when it is over, then Jews, instead of being doomed, will be held up as an example.

Anne Frank

In the beginning, God created Heaven and Earth. He settled in Heaven and assigned the Earth to the people. And on the Earth, this happened....

Ignacy Chiger, from the introduction to
his unpublished memoir, World in Gloom

The Girl
in the
Green Sweater

Introduction

Picture 5

YES, I REMEMBER

I T IS A FUNNY THING, MEMORY . It is a trick we play on ourselves, to keep connected to who we were, what we thought, how we lived. It is fractured, like a dream that returns in bits and pieces. It is the answer to forgetting.

I rememberthe bits and pieces and the entire cloth. My father used to tell me I had a mind like a trap. Krzysha will know, he would say. Krzysha remembers. He called me Krzysha. Everyone else called me Krysha, and the difference was everything.

Yes, I remember. If I saw something, heard something, experienced something, I put it away for later, someplace where I could reach for it and call it back to mind. It was all filed away, the stories of my life bundled for safekeeping. Even now, when most of the people I remember are gone, they are here for me like they never left. Like what happened so many years ago happened yesterday instead.

My memories come to me in Polish. I think in Polish, dream in Polish, remember in Polish. Then it passes through Hebrew and somehow comes out in English. I do not know how this works, but this is how it is. Sometimes it has to go through German and Yiddish before I am able to tell it or understand it. All these thoughts. All these moments. All these sights and sounds and smellstiny, fractured pieces, fighting for my attention, calling me to make sense of the whole. My memories of my familys struggle during the Second World War are the memories of a child, reinforced over a lifetime. They are my memories first, and then on top I have put my fathers memory, and my mothers, and even my baby brothers. To these I have added the reflections of others who shared our ordeal, along with the histories I have read. I might have been only a child, but what I saw, what I heard, what I experienced, has been reconsidered many, many times, and it is the accumulation of memories that now survive.

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