Rabu, 15 Januari 2014

~ Download My Father's Keeper: Children of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History of Damage and Denial, by Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert

Download My Father's Keeper: Children of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History of Damage and Denial, by Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert

My Father's Keeper: Children Of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History Of Damage And Denial, By Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert. In undergoing this life, lots of people always attempt to do as well as obtain the best. New understanding, encounter, lesson, and also everything that could boost the life will be done. Nevertheless, lots of people in some cases really feel puzzled to obtain those things. Feeling the restricted of encounter and also resources to be better is among the does not have to possess. Nonetheless, there is a quite basic thing that can be done. This is what your educator always manoeuvres you to do this. Yeah, reading is the response. Reviewing a publication as this My Father's Keeper: Children Of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History Of Damage And Denial, By Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert as well as various other references could improve your life top quality. Exactly how can it be?

My Father's Keeper: Children of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History of Damage and Denial, by Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert

My Father's Keeper: Children of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History of Damage and Denial, by Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert



My Father's Keeper: Children of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History of Damage and Denial, by Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert

Download My Father's Keeper: Children of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History of Damage and Denial, by Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert

My Father's Keeper: Children Of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History Of Damage And Denial, By Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert Actually, book is actually a home window to the globe. Even lots of people might not appreciate checking out books; guides will certainly always provide the specific information about reality, fiction, experience, journey, politic, religious beliefs, and also more. We are below a site that provides compilations of publications more than the book shop. Why? We offer you bunches of varieties of connect to obtain guide My Father's Keeper: Children Of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History Of Damage And Denial, By Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert On is as you need this My Father's Keeper: Children Of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History Of Damage And Denial, By Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert You could find this book quickly right here.

When going to take the encounter or thoughts kinds others, book My Father's Keeper: Children Of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History Of Damage And Denial, By Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert can be a good resource. It's true. You can read this My Father's Keeper: Children Of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History Of Damage And Denial, By Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert as the resource that can be downloaded here. The way to download and install is also very easy. You can go to the web link page that we provide and then purchase guide to make a deal. Download and install My Father's Keeper: Children Of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History Of Damage And Denial, By Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert and also you can put aside in your personal tool.

Downloading and install guide My Father's Keeper: Children Of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History Of Damage And Denial, By Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert in this web site lists can make you more benefits. It will reveal you the best book collections as well as finished compilations. Numerous books can be discovered in this website. So, this is not just this My Father's Keeper: Children Of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History Of Damage And Denial, By Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert Nevertheless, this publication is described read considering that it is an impressive publication to provide you more chance to get encounters and also ideas. This is straightforward, read the soft documents of guide My Father's Keeper: Children Of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History Of Damage And Denial, By Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert and you get it.

Your perception of this publication My Father's Keeper: Children Of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History Of Damage And Denial, By Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert will lead you to obtain just what you exactly require. As one of the inspiring publications, this publication will provide the presence of this leaded My Father's Keeper: Children Of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History Of Damage And Denial, By Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert to gather. Also it is juts soft data; it can be your cumulative file in gizmo as well as other gadget. The important is that use this soft file publication My Father's Keeper: Children Of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History Of Damage And Denial, By Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert to check out as well as take the benefits. It is exactly what we suggest as publication My Father's Keeper: Children Of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History Of Damage And Denial, By Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert will enhance your thoughts and mind. After that, checking out publication will certainly also boost your life high quality better by taking excellent activity in well balanced.

My Father's Keeper: Children of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History of Damage and Denial, by Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert

In 1959 the German journalist Norbert Lebert conducted extensive interviews with the sons and daughters of prominent Nazis: Hess, Bormann, Göring, and Himmler; Baldur von Schirach, creator of the Hitler Youth; and Hans Frank, governor of Poland. Then at the beginning of their adult lives, Lebert's subjects were the bearers of notorious names that made them outcasts to some, symbols of a lost glory to others.

Forty years later, Lebert's son Stephan-also a journalist-tracked down these same men and women to find out what had become of them, how they remembered their fathers, and what effect the names they carried had on the paths they had taken. Lebert's account of his conversations, juxtaposed with his father's postwar interviews, gives us an extraordinary and unflinching look at how these individuals have coped with a horrifying heritage.

The stories that emerge are fascinating, surprising, and often disturbing: The young man who refuses military service and is granted conscientious objector status on the grounds that his father is imprisoned by the state--as a Nazi war criminal. The boy who begins his education learning the principles of fascism, finishes it at a Catholic boarding school, and later becomes a priest and a missionary to Africa. The woman who was systematically refused work because she wouldn't use an alias, but who now lives in the suburbs under her husband's name and keeps secret contacts with other nostalgic Nazis. The journalist who writes a scathing magazine article reviling the father responsible for two million deaths, and is greeted with a barrage of letters from outraged Germans--whatever your father may have done, the letters argue, fathers must always be honored.

My Father's Keeper is a remarkable and illuminating addition to our knowledge of the Nazi past and of how this past continues to haunt the present. And it offers a chilling perspective on the way children live with the legacy of their parents' deeds.

  • Sales Rank: #1554898 in Books
  • Brand: Little Brown
  • Published on: 2001-09-17
  • Ingredients: Example Ingredients
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.50" h x 1.00" w x 6.25" l,
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 248 pages

From Publishers Weekly
In 1959, German journalist Norbert Lebert set out to interview the offspring of former Nazi leaders young adults with surnames like Himmler and Hess, Bormann and Gering. Six years after Norbert's death in 1993, his son Stephan, a journalist, discovered the interviews among his father's papers and set out to re-interview the children, now senior citizens. Gudrun Himmler and Edda Gering refused. But Wolf-Rediger Hess, Martin Bormann Jr., Niklas and Norman Frank, and Klaus von Schirach were all willing. This is a powerful book, masterfully conceived, brilliant and devastating. The original interviews are interspersed between Stephan's conversations with (or in the case of Himmler and Gering, about) the former young adults who sat with his father. Other chapters explore the parent-child relationship and the nature of evil as they emerge from those conversations. The depth and complexity of the parent-child bond is evident throughout the book, whether the child in question has embraced (Burwitz, Hess) or rejected (Niklas Frank, Bormann) the values and beliefs of the father. Because he's viewing events from a greater distance, Stephan is able to raise a number of wide-ranging questions exploring the reasons behind the national outrage when Niklas Frank published a brutal piece detailing the depth of his hatred toward his father, former governor-general of Poland, and musing on the country's collective denial of individual responsibility during the war. There is much more to be written about the psychology and emotional life of the generation of Germans that fought WWII. But the Leberts have done a remarkable job of breaking a trail through the morass of repression and denial obscuring issues that will continue to disquiet future generations. 20 b&w photos.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
In 1959 the German writer Norbert Lebert interviewed the children of infamous Nazis. After his death in 1993, his son, Stephan, inherited the manuscripts and talked with the now-aging sons and daughters for a second time. They included Gudrun Himmler, the daughter of Heinrich Himmler, and Hermann Goring's daughter Edda. Stephan Lebert added interviews with Klaus von Schirach, the son of Baldur von Schirach, the Hitler Youth leader. The interviewees were asked "What does it mean to have a father who participated in mass murder?" The children, in general, defended their fathers' unspeakable crimes. Only one spoke out against his father, saying that he was "cowardly, corrupt, brutish, and sexually stimulated by power" and holding him responsible for the deaths of two million people. This book, first published in Germany in 2000, is an important work, indicating that anti-Semitism is far from dead. George Cohen
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review
Fascinating. Professor Eric Hobsbawm Highly interesting ... what emerges not only casts light on the mentality and psychology of "Nazi children" in later life, but also on the wider issue of lingering trauma of the Third Reich. Professor Ian Kershaw MY FATHER'S KEEPER is a worthwhile read. SUNDAY BUSINESS POST It is an absorbing read, told with sympathy and discretion. MAIL ON SUNDAY Amazing stories FINANCIAL TIMES

Most helpful customer reviews

38 of 43 people found the following review helpful.
Public Nazi, Private Father: The Child's View Now and Then
By Donald Mitchell
If you are like me, you know relatively little about the lives of the children of the Nazi leaders. Although their fathers' names live in infamy, the children and their names often survived in obscurity and semi-privacy. This powerful set of interviews from 1959 and 1999-2000 provides a psychological lens to see the children, being a child in general, German society, and the actions of the Allies.
In 1959 German journalist, Norbert Lebert, interviewed in a number of children of the Nazi leaders. After his death, Mr. Lebert's son, Stephan, chose to attempt to bring those interviews up to date in 1999-2000. Where he could not (as with Gudrun Himmler and Edda Goring), the younger Mr. Lebert provides a thumbnail history of what is known about the intervening years.
To me, the most interesting parts of the book were 1959 interviews. Mr. Norbert Lebert did a sensitive job of considering the children of the leaders as people rather than as celebrities or subjects of a study. The information he developed was quite extensive, broad, and very interesting.
In each case, the father cast a long shadow onto his children. While very young, these children were usually aware that their fathers were powerful and admired. Some, like Edda Goring, even had celebrity status in their own right. The Allied attempts to prosecute the fathers disrupted the lives of the mothers and their children. Some fathers died by their own hand (like Himmler and Goring), some were hung, while others languished in prison where there could be little contact (like von Schirach and Hess). So to a large extent, these children were fatherless after 1945. After World War II, their fathers' pasts continued to influence their lives, by causing some to be curious, some to scorn them, and others to approve.
The private father was usually remembered with affection and nostalgia. The public father was often obscure, except for the older children (like Gudrun Himmler). The public activities were often caught up in having Hitler as a godfather, or other kinds of positive attention.
The heritage of the Nazi past was accepted by some of the children as positive. Two sons broke strongly with what their fathers had done. The most interesting case is that of Mr. Niklas Frank who wrote a series of strong articles describing in explicit language his father (Hans Frank, governor of Poland) and his feelings about his father in very negative terms. Many Germans condemned Mr. Frank for being unfaithful to his father.
Anyone who expects the children of a war criminal to be an ideal witness about that person's culpability is obviously mistaken. Some of the incidental stories though will shake you, such as the experience of being shown Himmler's collection of household items made from parts of human bodies. Hess's son and Himmler's daughter had great hopes of correcting what they believed to be major errors in the historical record about their fathers. Edda Goring claimed that her name was never a drawback to her, although several of the other children recount many times when their names caused problems such as not being accepted for schools or jobs.
The book in many other ways is disappointing. Unless you are very familiar with the Nazis, you will receive less than the minimum information you should know about the fathers. Perhaps in Germany everyone knows these facts. In the United States, I suspect that is not true.
Long sections are circular and others are rambling with speculations by other authors.
Other sources that could have shed light on these lives are missing. How did the lives of these people compare to that of their German contemporaries whose fathers were or were not prominent Nazis? What did public opinion polls in Germany say about their fathers at the various times when the interviews were undertaken? What did the school books say about their fathers that they read? How do the children of convicted and executed murderers usually react to the memory of their guilty parent? How was the reaction in Germany different from the reaction in Italy to the children of the Fascist leaders there? All of these questions could probably have been answered, but were not raised.
After you finish reading this book, think about how we can help the children of both those who cause and are victimized by violence. Unless we break that vicious cycle of adding the burden to the next generation in unsustainable ways, we run the risk of perpetuating hatred and violence long into the future.
Honor the goodness that should guide our lives!

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful.
All too close
By Dusty
This book struck a deep chord in me as a South African. It was an unsettling and thought-provoking read. We also have a dark icky past, and frighteningly the theme of guilt-by-pedigree, and of therefore trying to forget the past, trying to pretend that it all never happened, is familiar. SA right now is going through the same process, although not to the same extent. It's downright creepy. I won't forget the book in a hurry!

8 of 10 people found the following review helpful.
The lives of the children of Nazi leaders.
By Kevin M Quigg
This was an interesting read. The author tries to delve into the the lives of the Nazi leader's children and detail how they viewed their fathers. Some viewed their fathers as great men (Himmilers and Goering's daughters). Others view things more circumspect, Boreman's eldest son loves his father but agrees his father was responsible for great crimes. Still others hate their fathers. Nilklas Frank hates his father to such a degree he celebrates the day his father dies. Throughout the book, both authors try to delve into the morality of each child and how he views his father's past.
I rated this as only a three, although it could well be a four. The organization of the book leaves something to be desired. The book goes between the father and son's writing and one has to note what time period he is in. Also, the author tries to much to place each child in a box. Who does best as understanding the hurt their father put on mankind and his own role as a father. These fathers may have done very evil things, but all in their own way was a loving father. To expect a child to think of his father as a monstor is perhaps bad form. An interesting read.

See all 16 customer reviews...

My Father's Keeper: Children of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History of Damage and Denial, by Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert PDF
My Father's Keeper: Children of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History of Damage and Denial, by Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert EPub
My Father's Keeper: Children of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History of Damage and Denial, by Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert Doc
My Father's Keeper: Children of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History of Damage and Denial, by Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert iBooks
My Father's Keeper: Children of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History of Damage and Denial, by Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert rtf
My Father's Keeper: Children of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History of Damage and Denial, by Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert Mobipocket
My Father's Keeper: Children of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History of Damage and Denial, by Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert Kindle

~ Download My Father's Keeper: Children of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History of Damage and Denial, by Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert Doc

~ Download My Father's Keeper: Children of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History of Damage and Denial, by Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert Doc

~ Download My Father's Keeper: Children of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History of Damage and Denial, by Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert Doc
~ Download My Father's Keeper: Children of Nazi Leaders--An Intimate History of Damage and Denial, by Norbert Lebert, Stephan Lebert Doc

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar