详细书目
| 类型/形式: | Biography Personal narratives, Dutch |
|---|---|
| 附加的形体格式: | Online version: Klempner, Mark, 1955- Heart has reasons. Cleveland, Ohio : Pilgrim Press, c2006 (OCoLC)607861692 |
| 材料类型: | 传记, 互联网资源 |
| 文件类型: | 书, 互联网资源 |
| 所有的著者/提供者: |
Mark Klempner |
| ISBN: | 0829816992 9780829816990 |
| OCLC号码: | 62118223 |
| 描述: | xviii, 235 p. : ill., 1 map ; 24 cm. |
| 内容: | Foreword by Christopher R. Browning -- Map of the Netherlands -- Beginnings -- Background -- Invincible Summer / Hetty Voute -- Faith Like a Rock / Heiltje Kooistra -- Chemistry of Compassion -- Rut Matthijsen -- On Wings of Song / Gisela Sohnlein -- Divine Mother / Clara Dijkstra -- Just the Human Thing To Do / Kees Veenstra -- A Glimpse of Grace / Janet Kalff -- Mastermind of the Heart / Pieter Meerburg -- Staring Truth in the Face / Mieke Vermeer -- Laughing It All Away / Theo Leenders -- The Heart Has Reasons -- Reflections -- Endings -- Comments and acknowledgments -- Endnotes -- Source materials bibliography. |
| 责任: | Mark Klempner. |
| 更多信息: |
摘要:
目次表:
Table of Contents for "The Heart Has Reasons":
Foreword by Christopher R. Browning
Beginnings
Background
Chapter 1 Hetty Voute: Invincible Summer
Chapter 2 Heiltje Kooistra: Faith Like A Rock
Chapter 3 Rut Matthijsen: Chemistry of Compassion
Chapter 4 Gisela Sohnlein: On Wings of Song
Chapter 5 Clara Dijkstra: Divine Mother
Chapter 6 Kees Veenstra: Just the Human Thing to Do
Chapter 7 Janet Kalff: A Glimpse of Grace
Chapter 8 Pieter Meerburg: Mastermind of the Heart
Chapter 9 Mieke Vermeer: Staring Truth in the Face
Chapter 12 Theo Leenders: Laughing It All Away
Chapter 11 The Heart Has Reasons
Chapter 12: Reflections 220
Endings 227
NOTES
注释:
FROM THE PUBLISHER "You can't let people be treated in an inhuman way around you. . . . Otherwise you start to become inhuman." So speaks rescuer Hetty Voûte in The Heart Has Reasons, a remarkable book that provides both a fresh look at the "righteous gentiles," and a meditation on what they might have to teach us more than half a century after they defied Hitler. In 1996, Mark Klempner sought out some of the last surviving Dutch rescuers of Jewish children to better understand how and why they made their courageous choices. Inspired by their willingness to risk everything to help others during the war, the author became deeply interested in what the rescuers have done with their lives since, and where their moral compasses point today. What emerges is both a window to the past and a vision for the future. If the rescuers could remain committed to making a difference while under the boot of the Nazi regime, we surely have something to learn from them about taking a stand against injustices, about maintaining an open heart, and about not giving in or giving up. Framed by Klempner's quest for meaning, their words resonate across generations, providing insightful guidance as to how people of conscience can navigate ethically in an increasingly complex world. WHAT PEOPLE ARE SAYING Pete Seeger "No one knows what this 21st century will bring, hope or horror. The brave people Klempner profiles in this gripping book show us there can be hope, even amid horror." — legendary folk singer Christopher R. Browning "Like no other work I have read, Mark Klempner's deeply moving book puts a human face on the Holocaust rescuers." — author of Ordinary Men: Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland and The Origins of the Final Solution Garret Keizer "An invaluable book for anyone who seeks to learn-or relearn-the art of compassionate resistance. " — author of Help: The Original Human Dilemma Harold Kushner "A book to restore one's faith in the possibility of human goodness." — Rabbi, author of When Bad Things Happen to Good People David K. Shipler "In these pages you will meet profound, uplifting people whose iron devotion to human caring compelled them to risk everything to shelter, hide, and save the vulnerable. You will not stop thinking about them after you finish reading, for Mark Klempner gracefully, hauntingly, invites the most intimate reflection on the moral struggles echoing from the Holocaust into the troubled present." — Pulitzer Prize winning author of Arab and Jew: Wounded Spirits in a Promised Land Lois Lowry "I read Mark's Klempner's book with great interest, and with gratitude that he collected these accounts from a generation of remarkable people who are now leaving us. It is so important that we hear their stories and tell their stories to young people again and again." — Newbery Award winning author of Number the Stars and The Giver Richard Rohr "We need to know that there are transformed people, even in the midst of a world that seems to avoid renewal, resurrection, and transformation. Hope becomes personal, concrete, and believable in these marvelous stories." — Fr., O.F.M., Center for Action and Contemplation, author of Radical Grace Paul Loeb "Powerful stories that can inspire us in our current time. They remind us that even in the most difficult circumstances we still can make choices that matter." — author of Soul of a Citizen: Living With Conviction in a Cynical Time
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Excellent choice for reading groups
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excerpt from The Oral History Review, Summer/Fall 2006 issue
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Vividly recounts the deeply terrifying experiences of ten gallant individuals
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from "Booklist"
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Most readers will find the rescuers' stories inspiring, thought provoking
Imagine that you live in the Netherlands in 1940. The German Army has invaded your country and taken over your government. At first, the spokesmen for the new regime promise that you will be able to continue with your life as it has been for your ancestry is the same as theirs. In fact, life will...
再读一些...
Imagine that you live in the Netherlands in 1940. The German Army has invaded your country and taken over your government. At first, the spokesmen for the new regime promise that you will be able to continue with your life as it has been for your ancestry is the same as theirs. In fact, life will be better because they will clean up the bad influences in your society. Do you feel reassured? Do you ignore that Hitler had promised to honor Dutch neutrality just days before the invasion? Do you ignore the firebombing of Rotterdam? Do you ignore the past seven years of news from Germany? Why do some people have a J on their newly issued citizenship cards?
According to Klempner, a small number of Dutch citizens knew exactly what they should do in 1940. There was no way that they would sit still and comply with restrictions. They would resist and undermine the Nazi authorities by hiding Jewish children in their homes or helping transport them to Dutch farms to be kept or shuttled out of the country. They may or may not have considered the dangers. Not to act would have been immoral.
In his book, Klempner presents the stories of ten Dutch resisters whom he interviewed in 1996. They risked their freedom and lives daily by carrying children on bicycles, on trains, or through alleys. Some stole identification or ration cards from municipal offices. Others took food and money to the foster parents who kept the children. Some kept children either in attics or pretended that they were their own. All found the resistance thrilling and fulfilling. Most report that in a strange way that the war years were the best in their lives.
The Heart Has Reasons is about more than just World War II. Klempner questioned his subjects about their lives after the war. Many have worked for other causes. In their responses, they portray the world as a dangerous place filled with evil that has to be faced and defeated. They are all pragmatists, who point out the shallowness of the post-war "never again" pledge from world governments. There have many "holocausts" since.
Most readers will find the rescuers' stories inspiring and Klempner's analysis thought provoking. They may feel a bet remiss for not doing more themselves. The Heart Has Reasons would make an interesting book discussion club choice.
*
<dl class="profile-datablock"><dt class="profile-data">Rick Roche is a reference librarian at the Thomas Ford Memorial Library who graduated from the University of Texas at Austin. He has worked in public libraries in Texas, Missouri, and Illinois and is interested in promoting reference services and the reading of good books. To see more of Rick's reviews, visit the ricklibrarian blogspot.</dt></dl>
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由 jessicalee0927 已更新 2009-11-28


