The Story Keeper: Weaving the Threads of Time and Memory, A Memoir
A memoir ultimately without a time and ultimately without a place. It's a story of families across generations of peace and of war, of homes that become lost and hopes that are kept, and a belief in a future that's better than the present.
The book is a compelling and exhilarating experience exploring the threads of times now long gone and the memories that arose from them to generate the stories that lived on. In each family, a fundamental life event spawns ripples that sweep across time and generations that would fade forever without exploration and would otherwise shed all meaning.
The key event in many lives is making the decision to leave home forever and to strike out not knowing if it leads to disaster or to a future and a better place. So many today around the world face the same uncertain decision - to stay or to go.
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Become an affiliateThe 20th was the century of refugees. This is the story of Mendel and Freyda, two Polish Jews fleeting the advancing Nazis into the depths of the Soviet Union. But it transmits a universal truth, with two humans representing millions. After a massacre of Jews near Riga, the historian Simon Dubnov cried out to the witnesses: "Schreibt un farschreibt!" - write and record! Fred Feldman honored this duty with gripping tale of terror and redemption. He is "The Story Keeper" for generations to come. This not just history at its best, but an ode to life. - Josef Joffe, Distinguished visiting fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University; publisher/editor of the German weekly 'Die Zeit'
This book is about real people who have shown incredible courage, determination and resilience beyond anyone's imagination. They endured hell on earth, and it did not end with the war. It is a MUST read, learn and remember. It can happen to anyone. - Teresa Pollin, Retired Archivist from the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington DC
Fred Feldman is indeed the Story Keeper. He acknowledges being "obsessed" with his family's story of life and death in Sokolow, Poland, where most of its Jews were murdered in the Holocaust. His detailed account of how his father Mendel and mother Frieda survived is spellbinding. They faced horrendous difficulties tearing themselves away from their families, staying ahead of the Germans, going deep into Russia, down to the Baltic, back to Azerbaijan (where Fred was born), and then emaciated and with two children to the DP camps in Austria, because Sokolow's Jews had all been killed, including Mendel's mother and siblings. Also moving is his account of how Mendel and Frieda get to America and manage to build a peaceful and productive life in Indiana, with successful and happy children and grandchildren. Unusual though is Fred's shift of focus from these exciting but conventional dramas to the details of his quest for the details of his family's story - every branch, every person lost or saved, and the photos and stories, each of which he calls a "treasure". Over several years, for example, he collects numerous versions of how his aunt Rojza (age 21) runs away from Sokolow to Israel (becoming Shosanna) and eventually how he settles on a version that accommodates all the apparently conflicting details. Fred's relatives participate in his quest but warn that no one but his own family will be interested in such an in-depth examination. Fred insists, though, that his particular family's history is a "story ultimately without a time and ultimately without a place." Fred is right. The far-reaching purpose of his particularized search becomes credible as the evidence he collects is integrated by the Holocaust Museum into a collection reflecting, not only what happened to the six million Jews killed during the war, but also to the horrors still being inflicted on many more millions of people. His quest to learn every fact related to his family's experience in the most incomprehensible injustice of modern history exemplifies the universal search for understanding of man's inhumanity to man, and of how to survive and overcome that inhumanity. - Abraham D. Sofaer has been the George P. Shultz Senior Fellow in Foreign Policy and National Security Affairs at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, since 1994, and is now emeritus.
I just spent the last two days reading the book and was mesmerized. The dedication to the author's family history, details and accuracy were inspiring as was the love he felt for his family and their stories. It always amazes me when I read these historical searches how much information is available when a person takes the time to find it. Great job. - Auggie Tomanovich