The diary keepers World War II in the Netherlands, as written by the people who lived through it

Nina Siegal, 1969-

Book - 2023

"Based on select writings from a collection of more than two thousand Dutch diaries written during World War II in order to record this unparalleled time, and maintained by devoted archivists. The Diary Keepers illuminates a part of history we haven't seen in quite this way before, from the stories of a Nazi sympathizing police officer to a Jewish journalist who documented daily activities at a transport camp"--

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2nd Floor 940.5481492/Siegal Due Nov 29, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Personal narratives
Published
New York, NY : Ecco, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Nina Siegal, 1969- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
12 unnumbered preliminary pages, 527 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 483-501) and index.
ISBN
9780063070653
  • Prologue: Searching for Emerich
  • Introduction: "Vast quantities of this simple, everyday material"
  • The Diarists (in alphabetical order)
  • Part I. Occupation, May 1940-May 1941
  • 1. "Paratroopers came down everywhere," 1940
  • 2. "One should make the best of it"
  • 3. "Anger blazed in young hearts," February 1941-March 1941
  • 4. "No graves, no gravestones"
  • 5. "Now the games can begin"
  • Part II. Persecution and Deportation, April 1942-February 1944
  • 6. "It's so hard to know what to do," April 1942-December 1942
  • 7. "Like a good gardener"
  • 8. "Was this forced labor or slaughter?"
  • 9. "A kind of gathering place"
  • 10. "Until at last the truck was full," July 1942-December 1942
  • 11. "If only there were more places for these poor people"
  • 12. "The time had come to go into hiding"
  • 13. "The worst year for all Jewry," January 1943-June 1943
  • 14. "The man who goes about with his notebook"
  • 15. "Like Job on the dungheap," May 1943-August 1943
  • 16. "She just had a very large heart"
  • 17. "The tension is sometimes too much to bear," September 1943-December 1943
  • 18. "The diary becomes a world"
  • 19. "The last of the Mohicans," January 1944-August 1944
  • 20. "A journalist in heart and soul"
  • Part III. Toward Liberation, May 1944-May 1945
  • 21. "I really shouldn't miss the view," May 1944-July 1944
  • 22. "All the trivial things"
  • 23. "The silence is almost murderous," September 1944-December 1944
  • 24. "What do you have to know to know?"
  • 25. "The Empire of the Krauts is over," November 1944-May 1945
  • Part IV. The War In Memory, May 1945-May 2022
  • 26. "An archaeology of silence"
  • 27. "Suffering and struggle, loyalty and betrayal, humanity and barbarism, good and evil"
  • 28. "A gradual lifting of the collective repression"
  • Conclusion: "There were more"
  • A Note on Translations
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Photo Credits
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This diverse and enlightening collection of excerpts from journals kept during the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands is an essential contribution to the history of WWII. Drawing from an archive of more than 2,100 wartime diaries, novelist Siegal (You'll Thank Me for This), whose Czech Hungarian grandfather Emerich Safar was a survivor, contextualizes her primary sources with exhaustive research and analysis of contemporaneous records, seeking to understand, among other questions, why 75% of the Dutch Jewish population died in the Holocaust, a higher percentage even than some Eastern European countries, including Hungary. The diarists featured include Philip Mechanicus, a Jewish reporter who documented his experiences at the Westerbork transit camp before he was sent to Bergen-Belsen and Auschwitz; two Dutch Nazis; a teenage factory worker without political affiliations; and a grocery store owner who became involved in resistance activities. Siegal uses their words to create a vivid portrait of the Nazi occupation as it unfolded, providing a wider lens than many Holocaust histories, and she incisively explains how the Netherlands' willingness to confront its complex Holocaust legacy has evolved, culminating in the 2021 unveiling of the National Holocaust Names Monument in Amsterdam. Even those well versed in the subject will find much to discover in this treasure trove of firsthand perspectives. Agent: Marly Rusoff, Marly Rusoff Literary. (Feb.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A collection of firsthand accounts of wartime experiences in the Netherlands. After the 1945 liberation, Dutch officials, anxious to document what happened during the war, pled publicly for writing, which resulted in an avalanche of several thousand journals and letters now housed at the NIOD Institute for War, Holocaust and Genocide Studies in Amsterdam. With few exceptions, such as Anne Frank's diary, they possess little literary value, but journalist Siegal's excerpts provide a vivid portrait of the daily lives of "victims and collaborators, bystanders and participants." Three of her leading diarists were Jews, two enthusiastic Dutch Nazis, one a member of the resistance, and one a teenager with no political views. She also includes shorter dispatches from a dozen others. Hitler considered Holland a quasi-Nordic nation, so, after the bloody 1940 conquest, Nazi occupation was relatively benign. During the first year, there were anti-German demonstrations and strikes to protest German exactions, and when local antisemitic gangs began their attacks, many young Christian men fought alongside Jews. Matters settled down once the Nazi grip tightened, whereupon, although there was a modest resistance, most citizens and police cooperated in handing over Jews. When it became clear that the Nazis intended to kill them, about 15% went into hiding. Ultimately, 75% of the 140,000 Dutch Jews were killed in five years. Nazi policy deteriorated in the fall of 1944, when the Dutch welcomed the failed Allied invasion. Food deliveries were stopped, and a famine followed; thousands died of starvation. Siegal's emphasis on the Holocaust makes for painful reading, but these are private writings, so much of the text records repetitious, day-to-day concerns, some of which readers may skim. Fortunately, the author steps in frequently to summarize events and describe her own life (she is the granddaughter of Holocaust survivors), and she concludes with an insightful account of how postwar Holland recalled the experience, a section that includes a surprising number of interviews with survivors and their descendants. Occupation as recorded by the victims--an often depressing yet useful historical document. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.