Available Formats
Paperback
Published: 29th August 2023
Hardback
Published: 12th December 2023
Paperback
Published: 29th October 2024
A Mother's Courage: How I survived the Holocaust - a remarkable story of bravery, kindness and hope
By (Author) Malka Levine
Pan Macmillan
Pan Books
29th October 2024
23rd May 2024
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
True stories of heroism, endurance and survival
Autobiography: historical, political and military
The Holocaust
Second World War
940.5318092
Paperback
256
Width 130mm, Height 197mm, Spine 18mm
192g
'A deeply humane memoir of immense power - there is nothing more affecting than a first-hand experience finely told' - Philippe Sands, author of The Ratline 'A fabulous memoir . . . a testament to [Malka's] skill and determination' - Dame Maureen Lipman A Mother's Courage is Holocaust survivor Malka Levine's powerful and moving tribute to a determined and resourceful woman who refused to give up hope so long as her children needed her. Malka was two when the Nazi invaders forced her family into the Jewish ghetto in Volodymyr-Volynskyi, a small city in present-day Ukraine. It was the first step in a campaign of mass murder. Of the 25,000 Jews in the city in 1939, only thirty would survive. Malka's father was shot in the first pogrom. Before he died he begged her mother Rivka to save their children. Rivka kept Malka and her two older brothers alive through eighteen terrifying months, as the Nazis systematically killed the inhabitants of the ghetto. In the midst of the inhumanity, a few people risked their lives to help. A Wehrmacht officer saved them from being shot and a Polish dressmaker gave them sanctuary when the SS went hunting for victims. Then Rivka persuaded a Ukrainian farmer and his saintly wife to hide her and the children. The Yakimchuks agreed and kept their word, even after the SS commandeered the farm. They dug a pit under their barn, and there Malka's family stayed through a freezing winter and into the summer until the Red Army came. At the end of the war, Rivka was forced to draw on her strength yet again as she set out to create a new life for herself and her children. A Mother's Courage is Malka's chance at long last to thank not only her brave mum, but also all the heroes who opened their hearts to her and her family.
A deeply humane memoir of immense power there is nothing more affecting than a first hand experience finely told -- Philippe Sands, author of The Ratline
Malkas survival story may be one of many but it is unique in the telling. To be hidden, by a gentile family who barely knew them, at huge risk to themselves, in a pit of soil and gravel, frozen by devastating Ukranian/Polish winters, fed, like animals on scraps of bread and a few potatoes and desperately sustained by a grieving mother on frozen snow to drink and concocted family stories to keep their minds alive, is the stuff of great drama and often, in the manner of Jewish humour, wry comedy . . . a fabulous memoir -- Dame Maureen Lipman
When you read Malkas story you cannot help experiencing rage at how low human beings can stoop and, at the same time, endless admiration for the best of humanity shown by Malkas utterly courageous mother and the Ukrainian Mrs Yakimchuk who risked everything to shelter Malkas family . . . a deeply poignant memoir -- Jonathan Arkush, (President, Board of Deputies of British Jews 2015-2018)
[An] extraordinary account of mankinds inhumanity to man. Although tragic, it offers hope too because of the role played by Righteous Gentiles in keeping the authors family safe -- John Bowers KC, Principal of Brasenose College, Oxford
Vividly and compellingly transports us to a world of incredible deprivation and breathtaking survival . . . A Mothers Courage is a fresh and powerful work of Holocaust testimony and we are the richer for it -- Ruth Maxey, Associate Professor of Modern American Literature, University of Nottingham
A vivid, compelling book that reminds us of the horrors of the Holocaust but also the resilience of the human spirit . . . both moving and ultimately hopeful -- Donald Ferencz, human rights advocate and attorney
Malka Levine was born in Ukraine but moved to Israel in 1948. She is widowed with two children and lives in Nottingham. She appeared in the documentary Getting Away with Murder(s), an investigation into why so many perpetrators of the Holocaust went unpunished. A Mother's Courage is her first book.