

When the war broke out, her father, who was aware of the Nazis’ hatred of Jews, was ready: “Because he had sensed that the war was imminent, he had been planning our escape even before the war started.” He persuaded three generations-his own family and those of his two sisters, 15 people in all-to head toward Soviet-occupied eastern Poland, where Soviets eventually transported Jews to a labor camp in Siberia.

In the summer of 1939, Lipiner was 6 years old and enjoyed playing with her older sister Frydzia and cousins in quaint little Sucha Beskidzka, Poland. Lipiner, in her debut work, describes how her father’s foresight, planning and resourcefulness saved the lives of 15 people. Holocaust memoirs are a crowded field, but few tell the story of escape via Siberia and Tajikistan. As World War II breaks out in Poland, a Jewish family travels east in this memoir of survival.
