Book details

  • Genre:biography & autobiography
  • Sub-genre:Jewish
  • Language:English
  • Pages:172
  • Hardcover ISBN:9798350973914

Finding Home

How the Holocaust Shaped My Family

By Elana Klausner Vikan and Gary Vikan

Overview


Finding Home is the story of how, over decades, antisemitism and then the Holocaust shaped my family. There were triumphs and there were victims: Mommie and my brother Eddy, who bore war wounds that could not be seen.
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Description


My family's story begins in Vilna, the "Jerusalem of the North." Antisemitism drives Papa to France, where he attends college, finds good employment, and persuades Mommie to join him. Eddy is born one month before the outbreak of World War II. Their life becomes a thrilling and scary adventure story, involving biking all over the free zone, forging exit documents, securing entry visas to the United States, fleeing to Casablanca, and sailing on a ship full of Jewish refugees into New York Harbor in June 1942. Three years later, I am born in Manhattan. We feel we have made it in America when Eddy gets into Harvard and we get our first car. And I finally will go to France – where I feel I should have been born – for my junior year at Bryn Mawr College. Two transatlantic crossings a generation apart; two transformative journeys. And 40 years later, a third journey – to the city of Vilnius and nearby oil pits at Ponary, the spot where the Nazis murdered Mommie's family. # Finding Home is the story of how, over decades, antisemitism and then the Holocaust shaped my family. There were triumphs and there were victims: Mommie and Eddy, who bore war wounds that could not be seen.
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About The Author


Elana Klausner Vikan was born in Manhattan, raised in Cranston, Rhode Island, and educated at Bryn Mawr College, with a double major in French and Russian. She spent the summer of 1965 in a Russian language immersion program and trip to the Soviet Union under the National Defense Education Act, after which she studied in Paris for her junior year. At Princeton University, in the Department of Comparative Literature, she was awarded the Sibley Prize to support a research year in Paris. Elana was a lifelong teacher of French, Russian, and the history of art, working at Princeton University, Georgetown Day School, and, for 28 years, Roland Park Country School in Baltimore. Elana now spends time with her family and three grandsons, plays classical music on the piano, enjoys her Boston Terriers, and continues to travel extensively throughout Europe, though most often to her beloved France, with her husband Gary. She collaborated with Gary on the book Postcards from Behind the Iron Curtain, about their year in Romania in 1974-1975.
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