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Lucy Adlington - The Dressmakers of Auschwitz: The True Story of the Women Who Sewed to Survive 

Boston Public Library
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In partnership with The Wyner Family Jewish Heritage Center at New England Historic Genealogical Society the BPL presented an online author talk with Lucy Adlington.
The Dressmakers of Auschwitz: The True Story of the Women Who Sewed to Survive powerfully chronicles the stories of the women who used their sewing skills to survive the Holocaust, stitching beautiful clothes in an extraordinary fashion workshop within the Auschwitz concentration camp.
About the book
At the height of the Holocaust, twenty-three young inmates of the infamous Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp-mainly Jewish women and girls-were selected to design, cut, and sew clothes for elite Nazi women in a dedicated fashion workshop. This workshop-called the Upper Tailoring Studio-was established by Hedwig Höss, the camp commandant’s wife, and patronized by the wives of SS guards and officers. The women hoped that the work of producing high-quality garments for SS social functions in Auschwitz and for the women of Nazi Berlin’s upper crust would spare them from the gas chambers.
In researching this book, Adlington spoke to sources from across Europe, the US, the UK and Israel and interviewed the descendants of the seamstresses as well as the last surviving seamstress herself. Drawing on previously unpublished testimonies and photographs, The Dressmakers of Auschwitz tells the stories of these resilient and courageous women, some of whom had a greater involvement in resistance within Auschwitz than was previously known.
Haunting and inspirational, The Dressmakers of Auschwitz memorializes the powerful and little-known tale of these seamstresses and the way they interacted with others in the camp: prisoners and Nazis alike.
This is a recording of an online event held over Zoom on Tuesday, September 14, 2021.

Опубликовано:

 

11 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 11   
@blowitoutyourcunt7675
@blowitoutyourcunt7675 2 года назад
Many Jews were found out via their fabric ration cards, you could forge food ration cards but everyone did that! The only excuse accepted by the Nazis for losing your fabric ration card was it falling in the river but many Jews in hiding didn't know that and were caught trying to obtain fabric for clothes. Following fabric through any timeline is always helpful and elucidates the culture but this Niche is quite fascinating! Thank you so much for your well researched book and talk! Cheers
@trinityjohnson9591
@trinityjohnson9591 2 года назад
This book was a real page turner! Such a fascinating new way of evaluating the history of the Holocaust - through fashion. I especially love how Lucy describes the photographs in her book based on what the clothes say about the person.
@yvonnemargo56
@yvonnemargo56 2 года назад
a fascinating story that i have never heard of . Lucy you are so smart and gracious! and smart
@HalifaxCamerataSingers
@HalifaxCamerataSingers 2 года назад
Wow - what a fabulous talk! I'm researching my husband's aunt, who sewed in Vilna. Thank you, can't wait to get the book.
@catblack4091
@catblack4091 2 года назад
This is fabulous! I'm currently reading the book, which is outstanding! One thing, can someone edit this and fix the numerous mistakes on the closed captioning text? It's absolutely nonsensical in a lot of places.
@gloriae.pineda1566
@gloriae.pineda1566 2 года назад
This book is beautiful, thank you.!
@merleshama3174
@merleshama3174 2 года назад
Such an interesting topic that I am sure many have never known that there was an upscale dressmaking shop in Auschwitz. One thing though my husband & I found it extremely disturbing was that the author was smiling way too much throughout the talk, especially while describing horrific events such as when the women arrived at the camp & where stripped & brutalized. She should have been more aware of how inappropriate that was to smile gleefully as if you are describing a lovely Sunday afternoon picnic!!
@amandalamb5724
@amandalamb5724 2 года назад
I just bought this book and haven't been able to put it down!
@emaitch6386
@emaitch6386 2 года назад
Me either!
@shelleymitchell7912
@shelleymitchell7912 Год назад
lucy please write more about this subject ive been reading about all aspects of concentration camp life since i first knew about it at 8 i believe we owe it to every camp victim and survivor to learn all we can so we never allow history to repeat itself
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