The Wolves at My Shadow

The Story of Ingelore Rothschild

Edited by Darilyn Stahl Listort & Dennis Listort
Categories: Literature & Language Studies, Auto/biography & Memoir, Linguistics, Language & Translation Studies
Publisher: Athabasca University Press
Ebook (Kindle) : 9781771990622, 324 pages, April 2017
Ebook (PDF) : 9781771990639, 324 pages, April 2017
Ebook (EPUB) : 9781771990646, 324 pages, April 2017

Table of contents

Acknowledgements
Preface

Part I
We Sail to America
I Begin
The Calm Before the Storm
Deception and Dismay
My Birthday
Dark Clouds are Everywhere
Conditions Worsen
Sand Falls Through the Hourglass
Everything Worries Me
We Say Goodbye

Part II
On My Own
Together Again
Seven Hundred Kilometres, More Goodbyes
A Major Catastrophe
A Bad Situation Becomes Worse
The Truth is Revealed
Our Secret is Safe
Parting is Such Sweet Sorrow
A Token of Friendship
The World of Garlic

Part III
Japan is on the Horizon
The Earth Moves
Nature’s Violent Display
The War is Coming
The Americans Strike
The Emperor Speaks
Occupation
The Time of My Life
Fate Intervenes
Another Story Begins

Epilogue
Bibliography

In 1946, a twenty-two-year-old Jewish woman pens a memoir, detailing her harrowing escape from Nazi Germany, her subsequent journey by train and by boat to Japan, and her decade-long residence in Kobe.

Description

Ingelore Rothschild was twelve years old when she was whisked out of her home in 1936. It was her first step on a cross-continent journey to Japan, where she and her parents sought refuge from rising anti-Semitism in Nazi Germany. A decade later, as she sails away from what has become her home in Kobe, Japan, Ingelore records her memories of life in Berlin, the long train journey through Russia, and her time in Japan during World War II.

Each leg of the journey presents its own nightmare: passports are stolen, identities are uncovered, a mudslide tears through the Rothschild’s home, and the atomic bombs are dropped on Nagasaki and Hiroshima. Ingelore’s bright, observant nature and remarkable capacity for befriending those along her way fills her narrative with unique details about the people she meets and the places she travels to.
The story of Ingelore and her prominent German Jewish family’s escape is an invaluable account that contributes to Holocaust witness and memoir literature. Although she was forever marked by her traumatic past, Ingelore’s survival story is a painful reminder that only European Jews with significant financial means were able to carefully orchestrate an escape from Nazi Germany.