- 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
Journeys Back
Journeys Back
- Chapter:
- (p.209) Chapter Twenty-Two Journeys Back
- Source:
- Holocaust Odysseys
- Author(s):
Susan Zuccotti
- Publisher:
- Yale University Press
This chapter focuses on the journeys of nine families of Jewish immigrants and refugees back to the old places they had been during World War II. Jacques and Paulette Samson returned to Saint-Martin-Vésubie in France in 2003, but have never returned to the area of Borgo San Dalmazzo in Italy. Lya Haberman Quitt was the first of the group to return to France from overseas, traveling from Israel to Paris to see her father, Oscar, in 1955. Charles Roman returned to Vienna in 1964, Sigi Hart and his wife Vera visited Juzet-de-Luchon several times, and William Blye and Walter Marx returned to Borgo San Dalmazzo in 1998 to speak at the unveiling of a stone monument in honor of the Italian people for helping the Jews in the province of Cuneo during the war.
Keywords: Jewish immigrants, refugees, Jews, France, Italy, Saint-Martin-Vésubie, Borgo San Dalmazzo, William Blye, Walter Marx, World War II
Yale Scholarship Online requires a subscription or purchase to access the full text of books within the service. Public users can however freely search the site and view the abstracts and keywords for each book and chapter.
Please, subscribe or login to access full text content.
If you think you should have access to this title, please contact your librarian.
To troubleshoot, please check our FAQs , and if you can't find the answer there, please contact us.
- 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