Showing posts with label WWII. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WWII. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

The Purple Triangle - A Symbol of Bravery

Pictures, Poetry and Prose suggested the following prompt: Write about someone brave today.
http://picturespoetryprose.blogspot.com/2009/08/brave-men.html

The Purple Triangle-A symbol of Bravery


Wolfgang Kusserow was beheaded by guillotine in Brandenburg Prison on March 28, 1942. He was 20 years old.
On December 7, 1939, father of six, Gregor Whohlfahrt was executed by guillotine in Berlin's Ploetzensee Prison.
Thirty-four year old Johann Stossier was executed on May 7, 1944, in Sachsenhausen.
Helene Gotthold, 48 years old, wife and mother of two was executed by guillotine in Berlin's Ploetzensee Prison on December 8, 1944.

Each one of these individuals wore an inverted purple triangle on their concentration camp uniform and each one could have made a choice to walk out of the camp they were in; they did not. The word Brave is defined in each one of them and in their stories.

During the holocaust over 10,000 Jehovah’s Witnesses were thrown into concentration camps because they refused to join the German army and spoke out against Hitler. It is estimated that between two thousand and five thousand members died because they would not compromise their obedience or their faith to God Jehovah. Many were tortured and given the opportunity to walk out of the camps if they signed a paper renouncing their faith and supporting Nazi ideology; few capitulated.

Film Producer James Pellechia said: “Holocaust scholars are well aware of the danger of showing only the horrors of this era. If we ignore the stories of the resisters, we send the unspoken message that nothing could have been done, that the history could not have been different. The story of Jehovah's Witnesses shows that the Holocaust didn't have to happen. Humanity does have the capacity to stand up and speak out for what is right."

Brave is standing up for what you believe in.
Brave is not compromising.
Brave is courageous endurance.
Brave is all those who wore the Purple Triangle.

Salynne ©2009

Friday, June 19, 2009

Book Review - The Guernsey Literary & Potato Peel Pie Society

My Review of The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society for Reading Trails.
February 10, 2009

I am a speed reader. Most books I can devour in an hour or two; they are a way to escape. There are a few very rare and special books that make me slow down and savour every word. This is one of them.

The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society is an epistolary novel set just after the second world war. The main character Juliet, a writer living in a post bombed-out London, begins a remarkable correspondence with The GLPPP society's members, learning about the island, their taste in books, and how the German occupation of the island affected its inhabitants. She starts out as an author looking for something new to write about, but as she becomes emotionally connected to her friends on Guernsey through letters, Juliet decides she must go to the island and meet them in person. Her life and the lives of her friends are changed in the most remarkable ways.

Initially, I grabbed this novel like any other. By the time I got to Juliets third letter and one of its lines where she explains that she had thrown...'The Shepherd Boy Sings in the Valley of Humiliation at the elocution mistress', I knew that I had to go back to the beginning. I started again and read very slowly.

It took me a week to finish this amazing, wonderful, story and I savored every word. The characters became my friends-they became so real I had to remind myself that this was a novel & just fiction. This book has done something for me that has not happened in many years; heart & my entire being became engaged. I laughed out loud; I felt utter horror & shock when a heart-wrenching piece of bad news was delivered. In one particular touching scene between Juliet and her little friend Kit, tears slid down my face and I cried. This was the first time in my life that I truly wept while reading a book. The tears continued all the way through to the last page and for hours after I put the book down all I wanted to do was pick it up and again immerse myself in the world of Guernsey.

I was so deeply moved that I checked out the website for the book & what I found made my experience all the more poignant. The main author Mary Ann Scaffer's health began to decline shortly after her book was accepted for publication and her neice, Annie Barrows, had to help her finish the book. February 2009 will mark the one year anniversary of Mary Ann's death so she did not live to see the release of her dream but I hope it will bring solace to her family that this book is already beloved by just about everyone who has read it.

It is my strong belief that millions of people will fall in love with the book and share my sentiments that we can all be thankful that Mary Ann graced this earth long enough to share Guernsey and her characters in that world with us. This work has made me want to stretch my reading to include the works of Charles Lamb, the life story of the Bronte sisters, and to explore the holocaust more fully. If you belong to a book club you cannot ask for a better choice; you get to read about and discuss someone else's Literary Society & the characters within. Seriously, if you finish the book & don't already belong to some sort of book club you'll soon want to join one!

The copy of the Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society that I read was borrowed. The afternoon after I finished it I went to my closest bookstore, bought the book at full-price (which is something for me-I'm always looking for a discount!), stopped at my favorite tea shop and started reading it again. On the way home I carried it close to my heart and when I finally did put it down, it sits on the shelf that holds only those few books that have touched the deepest parts of my soul.

Salynne ©2009

Guernsey is #1!

As I've said in other blogs my all time forever favorite book is The Guernsey Literary & Potato Peel Pie Society. When I visited the website tonight I read that it has been on the New York Times best seller list for over 3 weeks.

If you have not read this book yet, please, please do so!

At the end of January, after reading this epistolary novel for the first time, I wrote an open letter to the authors of the book and it was posted on the website until recently. You can imagine my surprise when I got a lovely letter from the daughter of the author a day or so after I posted it--she said that of all of the letters they have ever received my letter touched them the most deeply.


I'll be starting Guernsey for the 3rd time on my holidays in July and I cannot wait to get back to the wonderful world that Annie Burrows created. I'm including my letter below in the hopes that it will inspire you and give you the incentive to pick up this amazing book and read it!

From S...... to Mary Ann (posthumously) & Annie 30, January, 2009
Dear Mary Ann & Annie:

I just read the last page of my friends’ copy of The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, wherein I had a good cry and came to this website directly.

I am a speed reader. Most books I can devour in an hour or two and most stories go in & out-they are entertaining and a way to escape but not worth remembering or cluttering my brain with. There are a few very rare books that make me slow down and savour every word.

I initially grabbed this novel like any other. I flew through the first letter; I read the second letter more slowly; by the time I got to Juliet’s line about throwing “The Shepherd Boy Sings in the Valley of Humiliation” at the elocution mistress, I knew that I had to go back to the beginning. I started again and read very slowly.

It has taken me a week (glorious appointments I made with myself to read while having a cup of tea) to finish this amazing, wonderful story. The characters became my friends-they became so real I had to remind myself that this was fiction. This book has done something for me that has not happened in many years–my heart & my entire being became engaged. I have laughed out loud; I felt utter horror & shock when news of Elizabeth’s fate was delivered and my heart grieved as I read. As I knew I was nearing the end of the book, I cleared my schedule this morning so that my attention could be undivided. As much as I wanted to find out what was going to happen to Juliet, Dawsey, Kit, and the others, I also did not want this profound and life enriching experience to end. When Kit gave Juliet the memory box that contained her treasures tears slid down my face. This was the first time in my life that I cried while reading a book.

How grateful I am that you, Mary Anne, graced this earth long enough to visit Geurnsey, to open this world and your characters to us. Annie, thank you for helping to complete her legacy when she could not.

I’m on my way now to purchase my own copy of The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Society and I’m planning to stop at my favorite tea shop, sit down and start reading it again. I know that on my way home I will carry this book close to my heart; when I do put it down it will sit on the shelf that holds only those few books that have touched the deepest parts of my soul.

With deep & reverential sincerity,
S.....


Salynne©2009