Read I Have Lived a Thousand Years Online
Authors: Livia Bitton-Jackson
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Historical, #Holocaust, #Biographical, #Other, #Action & Adventure, #Survival Stories
Dunaszerdahely
—DU-nah-SER-dah-hay—Hungarian name for Dunajska Streda
Ellike
—ELL-I-keh—diminutive, affectionate form of name Elli; Ellikém, my little Elli—H
UNGARIAN
Hasid
—hah-SID—member of a pious Jewish sect—H
EBREW
Heil Hitler!
—hile HIT-ler—Hail, Hitler!—G
ERMAN
Herr Offizier
—hair aw-fee-Tseer—Sir Officer (proper usage in addressing German military staff)—G
ERMAN
Kapo
—KAH-poh—head of work detail—G
ERMAN
, from Italian
capo,
head
Kommando
—koh-MAHN-doh—work detail—G
ERMAN
Lagerälteste
—LAH-ger-ELL-tess-teh—head of camp (literally, camp elder)—G
ERMAN
Liebling
—LEEP-ling—sweetheart—G
ERMAN
Liquidation
—LIK-vee-dah-TSIOHN—dissolution, slang for extermination, killing—G
ERMAN
Lódz
—loodg or lahts—city in central Poland
Los!
—lohss—Get going!—G
ERMAN
marschieren
—mar-Shee-ren—to march—G
ERMAN
Oberscharführer
—OH-ber-shahr-FEE-rer—senior platoon leader (military rank)—G
ERMAN
Planierung
—plah-NEER-oong—leveling of ground—G
ERMAN
Plaszow
—PLAH-shov—concentration camp near Krakow, Poland
Raus
!—rowss—Get out!—G
ERMAN
razzia
—police raid—H
UNGARIAN
, originally from Arabic
Revier
—reh-VEER—infirmary—G
ERMAN
Ruhe!
—ROO-eh—Quiet!—G
ERMAN
Šamorín
—SHA-taw-raw-i-yaw-oo-i-hay—town in north-eastern Hungary
Schutzstaffel
—SHUTZ-shtah-fell—elite military and police unit of the Nazi party (literally, protective squadron)—G
ERMAN
Shaharit
—shah-khah-REET—morning prayer—H
EBREW
shiva
—SHIH-vuh—seven-day period of mourning in Jewish religious practice—H
EBREW
Somorja
—Shaw-mawr-yaw—Hungarian name for Šamorin
SS
—ess-ESS—
see
Schutzstaffel
Tattersall
—TAT-ter-sawl—London horse market founded by horseman Richard Tattersall
Weltschmerz
—VELT-shmairts—sadness about the world’s evils (literally, world pain)—G
ERMAN
Zählappell
—TSAIL-ah-PELL—roll call—G
ERMAN
L
IVIA
B
ITTON
-J
ACKSON
, born Elli L. Friedmann in Czechoslovakia, was thirteen when she, her mother, and her brother were taken to Auschwitz. They were liberated in 1945 and came to the United States on a refugee boat in 1951. She received a Ph.D. in Hebrew culture and Jewish history from New York University. Dr. Bitton-Jackson has been a professor of history at City University of New York for thirty-seven years. Her previous books include
Elli: Coming of Age in the Holocaust,
which received the Christopher Award, the Eleanor Roosevelt Humanitarian Award, and the Jewish Heritage Award. Dr. Bitton-Jackson lives in Israel with her husband, children, and grandchildren.
About the photo on the front cover:
This picture was reproduced from a glass plate that served as a negative of the photo taken of Elli in the spring of 1944 by a Nazi photographer right before her deportation to Auschwitz. After she returned from the death camps, Elli, while searching for pictures of her father and aunt who perished, found this negative of herself among hundreds dumped in the backyard of the photographer’s deserted home. For more than fifty-two years she has carefully guarded the glass plate.