Motherland: Beyond the Holocaust: A Mother-Daughter Journey to Reclaim the Past
Price:  $5.20
Description:
Author: Fern Schumer Chapman Paperback
When asked to accompany her mother on a return visit to her native
Germany, Chapman jumped at the opportunity. At stake was a chance to
reclaim both her ancestors and her own mother, Edith, whose past as a
Holocaust escapee had created an emotional barrier between the two of
them. "She lost her childhood to the war," Chapman writes tenderly,
"and, in a way, I lost my childhood to her." In 1938, at the age of 12,
Edith's parents sent her from Stockstadt am Rhein to live in Chicago
with relatives who treated her badly. Chapman, a former Chicago Tribune
reporter, lovingly describes her scarred mother's decision to return to
her hometown; the emotional catharsis and peace her return brings; and
the various reactions her return engenders in the townspeople. (Some
old classmates throw Edith a party, but others will not look at her.)
Chapman's narrative is strongest when she writes as journalist rather
than memoirist, letting the Germans speak for themselves. She
introduces two gripping individuals: the town historian, Hans, who
lives in remorse and humiliation because he failed to help Edith's
mother; and Mina, Edith's family's maid and soul-sister, whose defiance
and hatred of the Nazis raged in her until her death. Although at times
Chapman's prose seems too sentimental, her report of a German town's
reactions to a Holocaust survivor's return is moving and engrossing.
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