An intriguing story of how even for the smallest family the effects of war can cause lasting havoc. In the midst of gruelling circumstances, all that survivors can do is try to make their way in life as best they can. Persecution, forced migration and tragic end-time brought about by the holocaust has distorted the lives of the generation that followed. They and their children bear the scars of Antisemitism that still is, and always has been, an inescapable issue of world history. This personal story goes from the universality of the horror of war to the particular experience of a damaged couple struggling for survival in a free host country. It illustrates human capacity to survive and how the author overcame a dislocated past to reach out for a better future.
About the AuthorDr Kenneth Wolfe was born into a dislocated family in wartime Britain. His asylum-seeking Berlin-born parents: father a Jew, and mother, an Aryan professional pianist, had fled to Britain. Their marriage was a disaster for them and their unwanted child. Despite this he became a university lecturer, teacher and scholar committed to closing the chasm between the believer and scholar with enhanced historical understanding. He was religious affairs adviser to the ITA and Thames TV.
Book InformationISBN 9781916556072
Author Kenneth WolfeFormat Paperback
Page Count 244
Imprint Chiselbury PublishingPublisher Chiselbury Publishing