Rozenblat's Diary |
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Author:
| Rozenblat, Anatoly |
ISBN: | 978-1-4033-0723-1 |
Publication Date: | Sep 2002 |
Publisher: | AuthorHouse
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Book Format: | Paperback |
List Price: | USD $21.50 |
Book Description:
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Any immigration in life of each person is joined with the objective reasons and necessity to admit that this process is very complex and difficult and of course, left deep traces of memory for each people.
Despite a difficult childhood (early losing parents and grow up in a children's home), during of his life as a Jewish person, felt "on his own skin" all anti-Semitism of the Soviet system. For the first time, as the creative person,...
More Description
Any immigration in life of each person is joined with the objective reasons and necessity to admit that this process is very complex and difficult and of course, left deep traces of memory for each people.
Despite a difficult childhood (early losing parents and grow up in a children's home), during of his life as a Jewish person, felt "on his own skin" all anti-Semitism of the Soviet system. For the first time, as the creative person, he could not realize his scientific goals in that country, and in 1989 year he decided to emigrate from the Soviet Union to America.
At this book, the author, without colors tries to describe all processes of immigration of the Soviet-Jewish people at this period via transit campuses of Austria and Italy.
All material in book is given in view of a chronic diary and describes the typical life of a single creative person, having fifty years of age.
The author admits also that this age and all process was very difficult and complex for the some reasons of the Jewish organizations and American Government particularly at beginning process in period of April month 1989.
In this book the author also shows the main ways of surviving at any immigration and his conclusions support with the numerous data and documents.
He gives careful attention to the question of the lives of the Soviet-Jewish people at period of immigration and also the role of the Jewish and other organizations at these places.
The author thinks that this book will useful for the social workers and for the people who has interest to the questions of the Jewish immigration to America.