Author picture

Rose Zar (1922–2001)

Author of In the Mouth of the Wolf

1 Work 102 Members 3 Reviews

Works by Rose Zar

In the Mouth of the Wolf (1983) 102 copies, 3 reviews

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Common Knowledge

Other names
Gajda, Wanda (alias)
Birthdate
1922-07-27
Date of death
2001-11-03
Gender
female
Occupations
human rights activist
Holocaust survivor
memoirist
Short biography
Rose Zar was born Ruszka Gutterman to a Jewish family in Poland. During World War II, at age 19, she fled her home in the Piotrokow ghetto and survived the Holocaust by passing as a non-Jew, obtaining false papers, and constantly changing her identity. She did many different jobs, including working as a nanny for a Nazi colonel. After the war, she emigrated to the USA. She published her memoir, In the Mouth of the Wolf, in 1992, and toured the world to share her story. Her book is still taught in schools throughout the USA and Israel.
Nationality
Poland
Birthplace
Piotrkow, Poland
Places of residence
Warsaw, Poland
Krakow, Poland
Place of death
South Bend, Indiana, USA
Associated Place (for map)
Poland

Members

Reviews

3 reviews
The author might best be described as spunky -- going from a sheltered, conservative Jewish childhood to the nitty-gritty business of survival on false papers, looking blackmailers and Nazis and potential rapists in the eye, refusing to be intimidated and ready to defend herself with shouting or deceit or even boiling water if necessary.

She goes into significant, interesting detail of the day-to-day business of hiding, the difficulties in finding a suitable job and place to live, etc. She show more was fortunate in having a "good" (that is, non-Jewish) appearance and being able to speak fluent Polish without an accent, but many times she questioned her decision to live among the Aryans and wanted to stay in the ghetto with her family and friends, even if that was significantly more dangerous.

I do wish Zar had written more about her emotions during this time, and revealed some details of her prewar life. When the book starts, she's nineteen, the war is in full swing and she's about to leave the ghetto, and that's all we know.

There's not much about her post-war life either; just one short chapter of the immediate days after liberation and then a two-page epilogue about her marriage and journey to the US. I would like to know if she stayed in touch with the SS officer's wife who had been so kind to her, and their child, whose nanny she was, whom she had great affection for.

In the Mouth of the Wolf doesn't especially stand out in the genre of Holocaust memoirs, but I can recommend it -- you could do a lot worse.
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The author describes her experiences in wartime Poland and how she survived the Holocaust by passing herself off as an Aryan.
A true story of a young Polish Jewish woman's escape from the Nazi's.

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Statistics

Works
1
Members
102
Popularity
#187,250
Rating
½ 4.5
Reviews
3
ISBNs
5

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