- Title Pages
- Dedication
- Frontispiece
- Preface
- Introduction
-
Chapter One Jewish Immigrants and Political Refugees in France, 1933–1939 -
Chapter Two Jewish Immigrants and Political Refugees in Belgium and Luxembourg before the War -
Chapter Three Flight to Southern France, May and June 1940 -
Chapter Four Jewish Refugees in the Unoccupied Zone, May 1940–August 1942 -
Chapter Five Arrests in the Occupied Zone, 1941–1942 -
Chapter Six Arrests in the Unoccupied Zone, August 1942 -
Chapter Seven Narrow Escapes and Subsequent Arrests in the Unoccupied Zone, August–November 1942 -
Chapter Eight Saint-Martin-Vésubie, November 1942–September 1943 -
Chapter Nine Crossing the Alps After September 8, 1943 -
Chapter Ten Those Who Stayed Behind -
Chapter Eleven The First Week in Italy, September 11–17, 1943 -
Chapter Twelve The Roundup in Valdieri and Borgo San Dalmazzo, September 18, 1943 -
Chapter Thirteen Deportation from Borgo San Dalmazzo -
Chapter Fourteen Hiding in the Province of Cuneo -
Chapter Fifteen Resistance -
Chapter Sixteen Traveling to and Hiding in Florence, September and October 1943 -
Chapter Seventeen Arrests and Narrow Escapes in Florence, November 1943 -
Chapter Eighteen Traveling to and Hiding in Rome, January–June 1944 -
Chapter Nineteen Auschwitz -
Chapter Twenty After the War -
Chapter Twenty-One After the War -
Chapter Twenty-Two Journeys Back - Conclusion
- Principal Witnesses
- Abbreviations
- Index
Hiding in the Province of Cuneo
Hiding in the Province of Cuneo
William Blye, Charles Roman, Walter Marx, and Menahem Marienberg
- Chapter:
- (p.142) Chapter Fourteen Hiding in the Province of Cuneo
- Source:
- Holocaust Odysseys
- Author(s):
Susan Zuccotti
- Publisher:
- Yale University Press
Borgo San Dalmazzo offers two routes for travelers going west toward the mountains and the French frontier: the valley of the Gesso and the valley of the Stura, separated by a steep mountain ridge. It was the valley of the Stura that provided shelter for many of the estimated 600 Jewish refugees from Saint-Martin-Vésubie who escaped the German roundups in Valdieri, Entracque, and Borgo San Dalmazzo on September 18, 1943. This chapter describes the ordeal of Jewish immigrants and refugees as well as their families who fled from Valdieri, Entracque, and Borgo San Dalmazzo in Italy to evade the Germans and hid in the province of Cuneo, focusing on the experiences of William Blye, Charles Roman, Walter Marx, and Menahem Marienberg.
Keywords: Jewish immigrants, refugees, Jews, Italy, Cuneo, William Blye, Charles Roman, Walter Marx, Menahem Marienberg, Stura
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- Title Pages
- Dedication
- Frontispiece
- Preface
- Introduction
-
Chapter One Jewish Immigrants and Political Refugees in France, 1933–1939 -
Chapter Two Jewish Immigrants and Political Refugees in Belgium and Luxembourg before the War -
Chapter Three Flight to Southern France, May and June 1940 -
Chapter Four Jewish Refugees in the Unoccupied Zone, May 1940–August 1942 -
Chapter Five Arrests in the Occupied Zone, 1941–1942 -
Chapter Six Arrests in the Unoccupied Zone, August 1942 -
Chapter Seven Narrow Escapes and Subsequent Arrests in the Unoccupied Zone, August–November 1942 -
Chapter Eight Saint-Martin-Vésubie, November 1942–September 1943 -
Chapter Nine Crossing the Alps After September 8, 1943 -
Chapter Ten Those Who Stayed Behind -
Chapter Eleven The First Week in Italy, September 11–17, 1943 -
Chapter Twelve The Roundup in Valdieri and Borgo San Dalmazzo, September 18, 1943 -
Chapter Thirteen Deportation from Borgo San Dalmazzo -
Chapter Fourteen Hiding in the Province of Cuneo -
Chapter Fifteen Resistance -
Chapter Sixteen Traveling to and Hiding in Florence, September and October 1943 -
Chapter Seventeen Arrests and Narrow Escapes in Florence, November 1943 -
Chapter Eighteen Traveling to and Hiding in Rome, January–June 1944 -
Chapter Nineteen Auschwitz -
Chapter Twenty After the War -
Chapter Twenty-One After the War -
Chapter Twenty-Two Journeys Back - Conclusion
- Principal Witnesses
- Abbreviations
- Index