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We Are Children Just the Same

Vedem, the Secret Magazine by the Boys of Terezin

We Are Children Just the Same( )
Editor: Wilson, Paul
Wilson, Paul R.
Foreword by: Havel, Václav
Compiled by: Ornest, Zdenek
Krizkova, Marie Rut
Kotouc, Kurt Jiri
Translator: Novak, R. Elizabeth
ISBN:978-0-8276-0534-3
Publication Date:Apr 1995
Publisher:Jewish Publication Society
Book Format:Hardback
List Price:USD $29.95
Book Description:

A National Jewish Book Award Winner

Prepared and selected by Marie Rut Krizkova, Kurt Jiri Kotouc, and Zdenek Ornest. Translated from the Czech by R. Elizabeth Novak

From 1942 to 1944 Jewish boys imprisoned at the model concentration camp Theresienstad secretly produced a weekly magazine called Vedem (In the Lead). It contained essays, interviews, poems, and artwork written behind the blackout shades of their cellblock. The material was saved by one boy who survived...
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Book Details
Pages:200
Detailed Subjects: Language Arts & Disciplines / Publishers & Publishing Industry
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):8.36 x 11.03 x 0.77 Inches
Book Weight:2.244 Pounds
Author Biography
(Editor)
Considered one of the leading intellectual figures and moral forces in Eastern Europe today, Vaclav Havel was born into a well-to-do Prague family on October 5, 1936. Denied the right to attend the university college because of his "bourgeois" background, Havel instead studied at a technical college from 1955 to 1957, and then enlisted in the Czechoslovak Army.

Havel left the army in 1959 and began a career in writing. He took a job as a resident writer for the Prague Theatre on the Balustrade in 1960 and wrote his first play, The Garden City, three years later. Wanting to learn more about the craft that he now considered a full-time career, Havel enrolled in the Academy of Dramatic Arts, graduating in 1967. Two years later Havel's passport was revoked because the government considered his writings to be subversive.

As an essayist, Havel has written the books Disturbing the Peace: A Conversation with Karel Hvizdal; Living in the Truth; Open Letters: Selected Prose 1965-1990; and Temptation. From 1979 to 1982, while in prison for subversion, Havel wrote a number of letters to his wife, Olga Splichalova. In 1983 those correspondences formed Havel's book Letters to Olga.

On December 29, 1989, Vaclav Havel was elected President of Czechoslovakia. He resigned in 1992, only to be elected the president of the newly formed Czech Republic in 1993. Havel has been the recipient of more than a dozen honorary degrees.

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