Description
About the Author
Mike Mitchell (b. 1941) is an award-winning translator of French and German who has been active as a translator for over thirty years. He is the recipient of the Schlegel-Tieck Prize for translations of German works published in Britain, has won the British Comparative Literature Association translation competition three times, and has been shortlisted for many awards including the French-American Translation Prize, the Weidenfeld prize, the Aristeion prize, the Kurt Wolff prize, and the Crime Writers' Association Gold Dagger. In 2012 the Austrian Ministry of Education, Art and Culture awarded him a lifetime achievement award as a translator of literary works. He lives in Scotland.
Reviews
If [Rajsfus] still wishes to recall how scrupulously - and even with zeal - the French police applied Nazi orders, he also wants to warn us against certain xenophobic or discriminatory speech still heard recently that could lead to behavior of that bygone age.
- Ekaitza
Adept reporting and personal experience make for a gripping read... While each book is strong enough to stand on its own, Operation Yellow Star and Black Thursday together make an unusual, important, credibly researched, and skillfully written contribution to Holocaust literature.
- Susan Waggoner, Foreword Reviews
Well researched and deeply personal, the accounts are powerful in their detail.
- San Francisco Book Review
Maurice Rajsfus is not only a historian of the raid: he lived it in his flesh, saw it with his own eyes, and if he had not had the audacity and ingenuity of a Parisian street urchin, son of immigrant Polish Jews that he was, would have suffered the same fate as his parents, deported and assassinated in Auschwitz. Without making improper comparisons, the roundup of the Vel d'Hiv is a very current topic. Maurice Rajsfus' narrative can help us to grasp both the logic and the implications of a policy of exclusion of populations and communities who, because of their ethnic, national or religious origin, are not protected by the State of which they are a part.
- Michel Warschawski, author of On the Border, winner of Le Prix des Amis du Monde Diplomatique (2002)
Maurice Rajsfus has devoted his life to denouncing and combating racism, fascism, intolerance, and police brutality, while putting in his texts a good dose of caustic irony.
- Jakilea, Basque Human Rights Defense League
An unsparing indictment of Paris police during the Nazi occupation.... The author's memory of July 16 is harrowing.... Besides commemorating his family's murder, Rajsfus raises awareness about how "the enemies of human rights are once more gaining ground," spouting xenophobia that is easily transferable to any minority group. A heartfelt, timely plea to remember past atrocities.
- Kirkus Reviews
Well documented ... essential for understanding and above all not forgetting. To this day there are still no pictures of the days of horror at the Velodrome d'Hiver.
- Clara Magazine
Through his sobering, exhaustive research Rajsfus chronicles the arrests, harassment, and deportations of Jews [in France].... Rajsfus' eyewitness, unblinking account of the events in Vichy France is a journalistic, yet passionately written j'accuse against the French collaborators and those who want to erase the [era's] devastating atrocities.
- Lew Whittington, New York Journal of Books
An interesting view into the field of investigative journalism as we follow the author's steps to find more information at the Archives de la Prefecture de Police de Paris [which] exposes the reluctance of the French police to come to terms with its own past. He also emphasizes the various problems faced by researchers studying the era in terms of access to archival material. This investigation touches on numerous issues of memory such as the role of bystanders and their apparent indifference, not only at the time of the events, but also as a memory of shameful collaboration.
- Patrick Fournier, H-France Review
Book Information
ISBN 9780997003499
Author Maurice Rajsfus
Format Paperback
Page Count 288
Imprint DoppelHouse Press
Publisher DoppelHouse Press
Dimensions(mm) 241mm * 152mm * 25mm