Written in Auschwitz Case Study: Works Written in Auschwitz by Sonderkommando Participants, Polish Political Prisoners and Lili Kasticher

This study focuses on the works of three different groups of writers who dared to write in Auschwitz-Birkenau, where anyone caught with a piece of paper or a pencil stub was immediately sentenced to death. Accordingly, inmates produced virtually no written material (Shik, 2012), with certain rare ex...

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Main Author: Lily Halpert Zamir
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The International Academic Forum 2018-11-01
Series:IAFOR Journal of Arts & Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:https://iafor.org/journal/iafor-journal-of-arts-and-humanities/volume-5-issue-2/article-3/
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spelling doaj-01265be92688484b86840f6ae91924492020-11-25T00:42:13Zeng The International Academic ForumIAFOR Journal of Arts & Humanities2187-06162187-06162018-11-0152395010.22492/ijah.5.2.03Written in Auschwitz Case Study: Works Written in Auschwitz by Sonderkommando Participants, Polish Political Prisoners and Lili KasticherLily Halpert Zamir0David Yellin Academic College of Education, IsraelThis study focuses on the works of three different groups of writers who dared to write in Auschwitz-Birkenau, where anyone caught with a piece of paper or a pencil stub was immediately sentenced to death. Accordingly, inmates produced virtually no written material (Shik, 2012), with certain rare exceptions: (1) The Sonderkommando, who documented everyday life at the camp, concealing their records in jars that they buried near the crematoria in the hope that someone would find them after the war, as indeed occurred. (2) Certain Polish political prisoners, who kept records in Auschwitz and managed to save their works. (3) Lili Kasticher, the only woman known to have written at Birkenau who did not belong to any organization; all her writings thus constituted her own private heroic initiative. She risked her life by stealing pieces of paper and pencil stubs to write poetry and encouraged her friends to do so, offering them a prize, a portion of her bread ration. Her writings were concealed on her person until her liberation in spring 1945.https://iafor.org/journal/iafor-journal-of-arts-and-humanities/volume-5-issue-2/article-3/Sonderkommandopolitical prisonerAuschwitz-Birkenaudeath campwriting
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lily Halpert Zamir
spellingShingle Lily Halpert Zamir
Written in Auschwitz Case Study: Works Written in Auschwitz by Sonderkommando Participants, Polish Political Prisoners and Lili Kasticher
IAFOR Journal of Arts & Humanities
Sonderkommando
political prisoner
Auschwitz-Birkenau
death camp
writing
author_facet Lily Halpert Zamir
author_sort Lily Halpert Zamir
title Written in Auschwitz Case Study: Works Written in Auschwitz by Sonderkommando Participants, Polish Political Prisoners and Lili Kasticher
title_short Written in Auschwitz Case Study: Works Written in Auschwitz by Sonderkommando Participants, Polish Political Prisoners and Lili Kasticher
title_full Written in Auschwitz Case Study: Works Written in Auschwitz by Sonderkommando Participants, Polish Political Prisoners and Lili Kasticher
title_fullStr Written in Auschwitz Case Study: Works Written in Auschwitz by Sonderkommando Participants, Polish Political Prisoners and Lili Kasticher
title_full_unstemmed Written in Auschwitz Case Study: Works Written in Auschwitz by Sonderkommando Participants, Polish Political Prisoners and Lili Kasticher
title_sort written in auschwitz case study: works written in auschwitz by sonderkommando participants, polish political prisoners and lili kasticher
publisher The International Academic Forum
series IAFOR Journal of Arts & Humanities
issn 2187-0616
2187-0616
publishDate 2018-11-01
description This study focuses on the works of three different groups of writers who dared to write in Auschwitz-Birkenau, where anyone caught with a piece of paper or a pencil stub was immediately sentenced to death. Accordingly, inmates produced virtually no written material (Shik, 2012), with certain rare exceptions: (1) The Sonderkommando, who documented everyday life at the camp, concealing their records in jars that they buried near the crematoria in the hope that someone would find them after the war, as indeed occurred. (2) Certain Polish political prisoners, who kept records in Auschwitz and managed to save their works. (3) Lili Kasticher, the only woman known to have written at Birkenau who did not belong to any organization; all her writings thus constituted her own private heroic initiative. She risked her life by stealing pieces of paper and pencil stubs to write poetry and encouraged her friends to do so, offering them a prize, a portion of her bread ration. Her writings were concealed on her person until her liberation in spring 1945.
topic Sonderkommando
political prisoner
Auschwitz-Birkenau
death camp
writing
url https://iafor.org/journal/iafor-journal-of-arts-and-humanities/volume-5-issue-2/article-3/
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