Explore the latest books of this year!
Bookbot

Mikhal Dekel

    This author delves into complex themes of identity and history through her literary work. Her writings explore the depths of human experience, offering insightful perspectives on the past. Readers appreciate her ability to connect personal narratives with broader cultural and philosophical questions. Her approach provides a profound reflection on how our collective and individual stories are shaped.

    Die Kinder von Teheran
    In the East: How My Father and a Quarter Million Polish Jews Survived the Holocaust
    • Despite decades of outstanding writing about the Holocaust, the full story of roughly a quarter million Jews who survived Nazi extermination in the Soviet interior, Central Asia, and the Middle East is nearly unknown, even to their descendants. Investigating her late father’s mysterious identity as a “Tehran Child,” literary scholar Mikhal Dekel delved deep into archives —including Soviet files not previously available to Western scholars—on three continents. She pursued the path of these Holocaust refugees from remote Kolyma in Siberia to Tashkent in Uzbekistan and, with the help of an Iranian friend and colleague, to Tehran. It was there that her father, aunt, and nearly a thousand other Jewish refugee children survived the war. Dekel’s part-memoir, part-history, part-literary-political reflection on fate, identity, and memory uncovers the lost story of Jewish refuge in Muslim lands, the complex global politics behind whether refugees live or die, and the collective identity-creation that determines the past we remember.

      In the East: How My Father and a Quarter Million Polish Jews Survived the Holocaust
    • Die Kinder von Teheran

      Eine lange Flucht vor dem Holocaust

      Berührend, bedrückend, höchst lehrreich: Indem Mikhal Dekel die Geschichte ihres Vaters rekonstruiert, der 1939 als Kind von Polen über die Sowjetunion und Persien nach Palästina floh, erzählt sie eine vollkommen unbekannte, größere Geschichte: Die der Flucht von weit über einer Million polnischer Juden Richtung Osten, der größten Gruppe der polnisch-jüdischen Überlebenden.

      Die Kinder von Teheran