Más información sobre el libro
The reminiscences of Jaroslava Skleničková cover the life history of one of the people born in Lidice whose fate was touched in a very cruel manner by the wiping out of the village. The Nazis carried out this massacre as a barbaric act of revenge against a quite innocent and basically selected-by-chance group of people. In June 1942, Mrs Skleničková was 16 years old, and without realizing it, she had double “good luck”. If she had been born a boy, the Nazis would have murdered her along with the other men of Lidice, and if she had been born not quite three months later, she would not have been a woman according to the Nazi machinery, but a child and in that case, there would have been little chance of her outliving the Nazi “special treatment.”
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If I had been a boy, I would have been shot..., Jaroslava Skleničková
- Idioma
- Publicado en
- 2010
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- (Tapa dura)
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- Título
- If I had been a boy, I would have been shot...
- Idioma
- Inglés
- Autores
- Jaroslava Skleničková
- Editorial
- Vega-L
- Publicado en
- 2010
- Formato
- Tapa dura
- Páginas
- 182
- ISBN10
- 8087275195
- ISBN13
- 9788087275191
- Serie
- Etiquetas
- No ficción, Tema histórico, Historia, Historias reales, Biografías, Mujeres, Historia militar, Segunda Guerra Mundial, Holocausto, Nazismo, Campos de Concentración, Destinos humanos, Lidice
- Calificación
- 4,75 de 5
- Descripción
- The reminiscences of Jaroslava Skleničková cover the life history of one of the people born in Lidice whose fate was touched in a very cruel manner by the wiping out of the village. The Nazis carried out this massacre as a barbaric act of revenge against a quite innocent and basically selected-by-chance group of people. In June 1942, Mrs Skleničková was 16 years old, and without realizing it, she had double “good luck”. If she had been born a boy, the Nazis would have murdered her along with the other men of Lidice, and if she had been born not quite three months later, she would not have been a woman according to the Nazi machinery, but a child and in that case, there would have been little chance of her outliving the Nazi “special treatment.”


