ACLS Reads 2016 Booklist Layout 1

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ACLS Reads 2016 Booklist Layout 1 Pathways to History: Remembering Rescue & Pathways to History: Remembering Rescue & Resistance During World War II Resistance During World War II Main Book: Once My Name Was Sara Main Book: Once My Name Was Sara by Betty Grebenschikoff by Betty Grebenschikoff Additional reading on this topic: Additional reading on this topic: CHILDREN’S PICTURE BOOKS CHILDREN’S PICTURE BOOKS The Butterfly by Patricia Polacco The Butterfly by Patricia Polacco The story takes place during the Nazi occupation of France The story takes place during the Nazi occupation of France when a child’s mother hides a Jewish family in their basement. when a child’s mother hides a Jewish family in their basement. The Grand Mosque of Paris: A Story of How Muslims Rescued Jews The Grand Mosque of Paris: A Story of How Muslims Rescued Jews During the Holocaust by Karen Ruelle and Deborah DeSaix During the Holocaust by Karen Ruelle and Deborah DeSaix The story of heroic Parisian Muslims who rescued Jews. The story of heroic Parisian Muslims who rescued Jews. Irena's Jars of Secrets by Marcia K. Vaughan and Ron Mazellan Irena's Jars of Secrets by Marcia K. Vaughan and Ron Mazellan The book details the life of rescuer, Irena Sendler, The book details the life of rescuer, Irena Sendler, whose efforts saved 2500 Jewish children. whose efforts saved 2500 Jewish children. FICTION FOR CHILDREN FICTION FOR CHILDREN Number the Stars by Lois Lowry Number the Stars by Lois Lowry A young girl and her family risk great danger A young girl and her family risk great danger as they shelter Jews from the Nazis. as they shelter Jews from the Nazis. NONFICTION FOR CHILDREN NONFICTION FOR CHILDREN Boy on the Wooden Box: How the Impossible Boy on the Wooden Box: How the Impossible Became Possible . on Schindler's List by Leon Leyson Became Possible . on Schindler's List by Leon Leyson The story of possibly the youngest Jew saved by Oskar Schindler. The story of possibly the youngest Jew saved by Oskar Schindler. Tell Them We Remember: The Story of the Holocaust Tell Them We Remember: The Story of the Holocaust by Susan D. Bacharach by Susan D. Bacharach The History of the Holocaust as told for children The History of the Holocaust as told for children using the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. using the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. FICTION FOR ADULTS & YOUNG ADULTS FICTION FOR ADULTS & YOUNG ADULTS The Hiding Place by Corrie Ten Boom, Elizabeth Sherrill and The Hiding Place by Corrie Ten Boom, Elizabeth Sherrill and John L. Sherrill John L. Sherrill The biography of an older woman who hid Amsterdam Jews and The biography of an older woman who hid Amsterdam Jews and was sent to a concentration camp when betrayed by her neighbors. was sent to a concentration camp when betrayed by her neighbors. The Paris Architect: A Novel by Charles Belfore The Paris Architect: A Novel by Charles Belfore A suspenseful historical novel about a reluctant upstander facing grave A suspenseful historical novel about a reluctant upstander facing grave danger when he helps a Jewish man hide in Nazi-occupied Paris. danger when he helps a Jewish man hide in Nazi-occupied Paris. Once We Were Brothers by Ronald H Balson Once We Were Brothers by Ronald H Balson A dramatic story of how the Holocaust divided the close friendship A dramatic story of how the Holocaust divided the close friendship between two men. between two men. NONFICTION FOR ADULTS & YOUNG ADULTS NONFICTION FOR ADULTS & YOUNG ADULTS The Zookeeper's Wife: A War Story by Diane Ackerman The Zookeeper's Wife: A War Story by Diane Ackerman The true story of Warsaw zookeepers who saved hundreds of Jews The true story of Warsaw zookeepers who saved hundreds of Jews by smuggling them into empty zoo animal cages and by smuggling them into empty zoo animal cages and also into their own homes. also into their own homes. The Courage to Care: Rescuers of Jews during the Holocaust The Courage to Care: Rescuers of Jews during the Holocaust by Carol Rittner and Sondra Myers by Carol Rittner and Sondra Myers Highlights the lives of several very important, courageous rescuers. Highlights the lives of several very important, courageous rescuers. The World Must Know: The History of the Holocaust The World Must Know: The History of the Holocaust as Told in the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum as Told in the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum by Michael Berenbaum and Arnold Kramer by Michael Berenbaum and Arnold Kramer An instructional and valuable volume presenting the history and events An instructional and valuable volume presenting the history and events AtlanticAtlantic CountyCounty LibraryLibrary SystemSystem AtlanticAtlantic CountyCounty LibraryLibrary SystemSystem www.atlanticlibrary.orgwww.atlanticlibrary.org www.atlanticlibrary.orgwww.atlanticlibrary.org Atlantic County Executive Dennis Levinson Atlantic County Executive Dennis Levinson Atlantic County Board of Chosen Freeholders, Frank D. Formica, Chairman Atlantic County Board of Chosen Freeholders, Frank D. Formica, Chairman 8/16 8/16.
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  • Bonus Material
    Hallmark Hall of Fame: 236th Presentation THE COURAGEOUS HEART OF IRENA SENDLER Bonus Material Section I: Behind Irena Sendler’s story & The Irena Sendler Project Section II: A Tribute to Irena Sendler Section I Behind Irena Sendler’s Story & The Irena Sendler Project Standing less than five feet tall, Irena Sendler is remembered as the “Little Giant” by the aging survivors she rescued as children from the Warsaw ghetto during World War II. Her heroism as a leader of the Polish underground who saved 2,500 Jewish infants, adolescents and teens is chronicled in the Hallmark Hall of Fame presentation The Courageous Heart of Irena Sendler. Sendler was a social worker raised by Catholic parents who taught her to respect all people and try to help anyone in need, regardless of their religion, social status or nationality. When her father was dying of typhus, he told his 7-year-old daughter that if she saw someone drowning she should try to rescue that person, even if she could not swim. “A requirement dictated by the heart,” Irena Sendler said later. When Nazis walled up Polish Jews to keep them cornered for shipment in rail cars to death camps, they were also subjecting them to starvation and disease. Sendler’s outrage at such cruelty overcame fears for her own safety and inspired her to act. Disguised as an infection control nurse, she sometimes entered the ghetto three times a day to persuade parents to let her smuggle their children out using false identities. Sendler carefully recorded each child’s Jewish name, Polish name and address on scraps of tissue paper she would hide in glass jars to be buried so birth parents could find them after the war.
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    To wielki zaszczyt być tutaj z Państwem w Muzeum Historii Żydów Polskich POLIN, aby wspólnie upamiętnić życie i hojność Dr. Jana Kulczyka, przyznając mu Nagrodę im. Ireny Sendlerowej 2015. Gdy w lipcu otrzymaliśmy wiadomość o śmierci Dr. Kulczyka, pracowaliśmy nad planami tegorocznej uroczystości wręczenia Nagrody. Po rozmowach z Jego bliskimi doszliśmy do wniosku, że warto zgromadzić w tym miejscu Jego rodzinę, przyjaciół i kolegów, aby razem oddać hołd Jego życiu. Wyrażamy głęboką wdzięczność wobec Tad Taube Muzeum POLIN, Stowarzyszenia Żydowski Instytut Historyczny w Polsce, Teatru Wielkiego - Opery Narodowej, oraz – przede wszystkim – dzieci Jana, Dominiki i Sebastiana, za wsparcie i chęć uczestniczenia w tym wydarzeniu. Oddajemy hołd spuściźnie po Dr. Janie Kulczyku, który w doniosły sposób przyczynił się do budowania mostów w relacjach polsko-żydowskich oraz do odnowienia historii żydowskiej w Polsce. Zachowajmy Go w naszej pamięci. Shana Penn Przewodniczący Taube Philanthropies Dyrektor Wykonawcza Taube Philanthropies It is a privilege to gather with you at the POLIN Museum to commemorate the life and generosity of Dr. Jan Kulczyk, and to honor him with the 2015 Irena Sendler Memorial Award. At the time that we learned of Dr. Kulczyk’s passing this July, we had already been planning this evening’s award program. After speaking with his family and colleagues, we realized it would be meaningful to bring family, friends, and colleagues together to honor and celebrate his life. We deeply appreciate that the POLIN Museum, the Association of the Jewish Historical Institute of Poland, the Polish National Opera, and most importantly Jan’s children, Dominika and Sebastian, have supported our doing so and wished to be a part of it.
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  • Thanks to William Szych for Starting This Reading List. Most of the Books Below Can Be Found on Amazon Or Other Sites Where
    Thanks to William Szych for starting this reading list. Most of the books below can be found on Amazon or other sites where you can read reviews of the books (Google Search). Remember you can usually request your local library to get books for you through regional book-lending agreements. If you know of other books that you think should be added, let us know. This list includes some works of historical fiction. 1. 22 Britannia Road, a novel by Amanda Hodgkinson 2. 303 Squadron: The Legendary Battle of Britain Fighter Squadron 3. A Death in the Forest (Poland’s Daughter: A Story of Love, War, and Exile) by Daniel Ford 4. A Long Long Time Ago and Essentially True, by Brigid Pasulka 5. A Memoir of the Warsaw Uprising, by Miron Bialoszewski 6. A Question of Honor: The Kosciuszko Squadron: Forgotten Heroes of World War II. Lynne Olson and Stanley Cloud 7. A Secret Life: The Polish Officer, His Covert Mission, and the Price He Paid to Save His Country, by Benjamin Weiser 8. A World Apart: Imprisonment in a Soviet Labor Camp During World War II 9. An Army in Exile—the Story of the Second Polish Corps, by Lt. General W. Anders 10. Andrew Bienkowski: One life to Give: A Path to Finding Yourself by Helping Others 11. Andrzej Pityński Sculpture. Anna Chudzik (Editor), Andrzej K. Olszewski, Irena Grzesiuk-Olszewska (Introduction) 12. As Far As My Feet Will Carry Me by Josef Bauer 13. Bieganski: The Brute Polak Stereotype in Polish-Jewish Relations and American Popular Culture by Danusha Goska 14.
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  • Holocaust Resources with Decscription
    Things We Couldn’t Say (Book) - the true story of Diet [pronounced Deet] Eman, a young Dutch woman who, with her fiancé, Hein Sietsma, risked everything to rescue Jews imperiled by Nazi persecution in occupied Holland during World War II. Throughout the years that Diet and Hein aided the Resistance - work that would cost Diet her freedom and Hein his life - their courageous effort ultimately saved the lives of hundreds of Dutch Jews. This book is Diet Eman's account of that tumultuous period. The first-person narrative vividly captures the events of her brave saga - from her initial engagement with Hein in the Resistance operation, to her eventual arrest and imprisonment at the Vught concentration camp, to the final grim toll of the war that devastated all of Europe. Diary entries that Diet and Hein logged during the war as well as excerpts from personal letters that passed between the two young lovers detail their thoughts and emotions during those years. Diet Eman's Things We Couldn't Say is an unforgettable story of heroism, faith, and - above all - love. It is also one of the great Christian stories of the twentieth century - the story of two people whose faith compelled them to stand up to the most sinister evil their generation has ever witnessed. Hidden In Silence (DVD) - Przemysl, Poland, WWII. Germany emerges victorious over the Russians, and the city comes under Nazi control. The Jewish are sent to the ghettos. While some stand silent, Catholic teenager Stefania Podgorska chooses the role of a savior and sneaks 13 Jews into her attic.
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  • Taube Philanthropies' 2015 Irena Sendler Memorial
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  • Irena Sendler and the Children of the Warsaw Ghetto by Susan Goldman Rubin Illustrated by Bill Farnsworth
    Holiday House Common Educator’s Guide Core Connections Inside H “A moving tribute to a courageous woman.” —Booklist (starred review) H “Arresting oil paintings pair with vivid prose [in this] haunting and unflinching portrait of human valiance.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review) Themes • Anti-Semitism • Survival • Hope • Fear • Courage • Identity Grades 3 up HC: 978-0-8234-2251-7 • $18.95 PB: 978-0-8234-2595-2 • $8.99 Irena Sendler and the Children of the Warsaw Ghetto by Susan Goldman Rubin illustrated by Bill Farnsworth About the Book Irena Sendler was a diminutive Polish social worker who helped spirit nearly four hundred children out of the Warsaw Ghetto during World War II. Irena Sendler was a young Catholic social worker in Warsaw when the Germans invaded Poland in 1939. Realizing that the fate of the Jews in the Warsaw Ghetto was death, Sendler joined an underground organization called the Council for Aid to Jews. Operating under the code name of “Sister Jolanta,” Irena arranged for nearly four hundred children to be smuggled out of the ghetto. Older children left through the sewers or with “work brigades,” and younger ones were taken out in ambulances and toolboxes. They were all placed in safe houses or orphanages. Their names were changed to protect them; but Irena kept a list of their real identities, which she safely buried in two bottles beneath an apple tree. This is her story. 1 4.L.4, 4.RI.2 Pre-Reading Activity Ask students to read about anti-Semitism at the following website: www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/article.php?ModuleId=10005175.
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  • IRENA SENDLER in the Name of Their Mothers
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  • Notes to Accompany the Powerpoint
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  • The Holocaust and Polish-Jewish Relations During the Second World War. Publications Catalogue 2000–2019
    PUBLICATIONS CATALOGUE 2000–2019 THE HOLOCAUST AND POLISH-JEWISH RELATIONS DURING THE SECOND WORLD WAR The InstituTe of national RemembRance PUBLICATIONS CATALOGUE 2000–2019 The InstituTe of national RemembRance THE HOLOCAUST AND POLISH-JEWISH RELATIONS DURING THE SECOND WORLD WAR PUBLICATIONS CATALOGUE 2000-2019 WARSAW 2019 concept and coverage Natalia Cichocka; translated by Wojciech Matusiak; graphic design and cover Marcin Koc, Leszek Tarwacki; printed by Libra-Print Daniel Puławski, al. Legionów 114B, 18-400 Łomża; ISBN 978-83-8098-808-8; Copyright by Instytut Instytut Pamięci Narodowej Komisja Ścigania Zbrodni przeciwko Narodowi Polskiemu, 2019 Contents From the publisher ...................................................................................... 5 Monographs .............................................................................................. 6 Studies and materials .............................................................................. 21 Dictionaries, lexicons, reference books ..................................................... 32 Documents ............................................................................................... 36 Testimonies and memoirs ......................................................................... 41 Albums ..................................................................................................... 47 Scientific periodicals ................................................................................. 50 Popular science periodicals .....................................................................
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  • Download File
    Irena Sendlerowa Irena Sendlerowa (Irena Sendler) was born in 1910 to a Polish family living in the suburbs of the city of Warsaw. Her father was a physician, many of whose patients were Jews. During the Nazi occupation of Poland, she was a social worker with the city's Social Welfare Department and, as an employee of this Department, she had a special permit to enter the ghetto where she wore a yellow star. In secret, Irena directed a children’s rescue group to smuggle Jewish children from the Ghetto. This group was part of an organised ‘underground’ council called Zegota , set up to help Jews. When Irena managed to rescue children, she provided them with false papers and placed them with the substitute Polish families, who pretended to their neighbours that the children were relatives. When she could not find a suitable family willing to take such a tremendous risk, she placed them in Catholic institutions like the Warsaw orphanage of the Sisters of the Family of Mary, or in convents. Everyone hoped that relatives of the children might survive the Nazis and so Irena kept careful records of all the children so that they could be found easily after the war. She hid her records, which she wrote on small pieces of paper, in jars in a friend’s garden. These records showed that Irena was able to save nearly 2,500 children from certain death under the Nazis. Inevitably, Irena was found out and arrested by the Gestapo. In October 1943, she was arrested and taken to the infamous Pawiak prison, where she was brutally tortured to make her reveal information.
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