Oprah's Holocaust Memoir Recommendation "Angel At The Fence" Defended By Author, Publisher Following Scrutiny

HILLEL ITALIE | December 26, 2008 04:38 PM EST | AP

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In this Sept. 25, 2008 file photo, Herman and Roma Rosenblat pose for a photo in their North Miami Beach, Fla. home. The author and publisher of a disputed Holocaust memoir defended the book's story of love between two survivors, but also called it a work of memory and not of scholarship. "This is my personal story as I remember it," Herman Rosenblat said in a statement issued Thursday through Berkley Books, which will release his "Angel at the Fence" in February. (AP Photo/J. Pat Carter, file)

NEW YORK — The author and publisher of a disputed Holocaust memoir defended the book's story of love between two survivors, but also called it a work of memory and not of scholarship.

"This is my personal story as I remember it," Herman Rosenblat, 79, said in a statement issued Thursday through Berkley Books, which will release his "Angel at the Fence" in February.

Berkley added its own comments, noting that a leading Holocaust expert, Michael Berenbaum, had found the story's "general outline" credible, but also saying that "any memoir based on the memories of a survivor is verifiable only by him or her alone."

Rosenblat's book is based on his well-publicized story _ embraced by Oprah Winfrey among others _ of how he met his future wife, Roma Radzicki, on opposite sides of a barbed-wire fence at a Nazi concentration camp. Scholars have questioned whether such an encounter could have happened.

"The events that are its background are part of history; the book, however, reflects my memories of how the events affected my life. I was a young child at the time my family was caught up in the Holocaust, and I saw things through a young child's eyes. But I know and remember what I saw," Rosenblat said in his statement.

"What I offer in this memoir are the images, sounds, smells and feelings that have stayed in my mind for some seven decades."

As the Rosenblats have recounted on numerous occasions over the past decade, he was a teenager in a concentration camp in Nazi-controlled Germany and she was slightly younger, her family pretending to be Christian and living nearby.

They met at the camp's fence, where for months she would sneak him apples and bread. Rosenblat was eventually transferred to another camp and lost track of his friend until years after the war, when both were living in New York and met on a blind date. Upon talking about their lives, they recognized each other and were soon married, in 1958.

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The couple live in the Miami area in Florida.

Since going public with their story in the 1990s, the Rosenblats have been celebrated by Winfrey, among others, and have been the subject of a children's book, Laurie Friedman's "Angel Girl." A feature film is scheduled to begin production next year.

But scholars, some of whom were quoted in a recent story by The New Republic, have been highly skeptical, saying the layout of the camp _ Schlieben, a sub-camp of Buchenwald _ made it virtually impossible that Rosenblat could have approached the fence without being spotted. According to maps of Schlieben, the area where he and Roma might have met was located next to SS barracks.

"Some serious historians as well as other historical sleuths have done some pretty serious research on this story," Deborah Lipstadt, a professor of Modern Jewish and Holocaust Studies at Emory University, wrote on her blog on Dec. 15.

No one questions that Rosenblat was a prisoner, but Lipstadt worries that Holocaust deniers would be encouraged should his meetings with Rosa be disproved.

"There are also survivors who are very upset about this story," she wrote. "They just don't believe it."

___

Berkley is an imprint of Penguin Group (USA).

NEW YORK — The author and publisher of a disputed Holocaust memoir defended the book's story of love between two survivors, but also called it a work of memory and not of scholarship. "This is ...
NEW YORK — The author and publisher of a disputed Holocaust memoir defended the book's story of love between two survivors, but also called it a work of memory and not of scholarship. "This is ...
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- tbrnotb I'm a Fan of tbrnotb 18 fans permalink

It's a story....i­t's a book. It's this survivor's memory. Who are we, including Ms. Lipstadt to deny it?
Let it go.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:44 PM on 12/26/2008

I like the part in the book where they underwent dental surgery without anesthetic. Oh, wait a minute - that was that other guy, something Frey - never mind.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:17 PM on 12/26/2008
- AlP I'm a Fan of AlP 4 fans permalink

lol.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:32 PM on 12/26/2008
- phlashba I'm a Fan of phlashba 14 fans permalink

Sure...let­'s "scrutinize" a 79 year old Holocaust survivor! This (and most of the comments) is deeply offensive on so many levels that it makes me physically ill!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:01 PM on 12/26/2008
- rudiy I'm a Fan of rudiy 2 fans permalink

This little story is getting more negative play and it accuracy questioned more than the books written by Holocaust deniers, deniers of attrocities like Rwanda and elsewhere and many non fiction books and biographies and autobiographie, so much that you would think this is the consumate history book on the Holocaust. It is a story of a person's recollection when he was a child, that is all it is.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:47 PM on 12/26/2008

Because this is denialism in sheep's clothing. By pretending that the victims in the camps were only lightly controlled you diminish their humanity and diminish the horror of the crime.

It is very easy to move from a fantasy of "love separated by a thin wire fence" to "why didn't they break down the fence, they must be less brave than I".

The facts are the victims did not break the fence because the fence was not thin - it was thick, robust and viciously defended.

No romance there at all.

And no twee little fantasy is going to change that, no matter how much some people want to believe in it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:01 PM on 12/26/2008

No harm done eh, Well try expressing a disbelief of this fantasy in Austria and you'll end up spending the best part of ten years in an Austrian prison.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:28 PM on 12/26/2008
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Wow,

Who the heck are these people telling Holocaust survivors what they did and did not go through?

That's a shame.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:28 PM on 12/26/2008

I dont get why all these people that write good books get the witch hunt after them, even if its not 100% factual. I mean seriously its their memories and feelings, not yours and if you dont like it.... dont read it

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:21 PM on 12/26/2008
- Eric8869 I'm a Fan of Eric8869 25 fans permalink

Amen

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:51 AM on 12/27/2008

Like Space_Walker wrote, it sounds like a movie waiting to be made (something like the Boy In The Striped Pajamas where a friendship between a German boy and a Jewish boy started though a camp fence). The Holocaust background aside, it's an interesting story from the perspecitve of the contrast between memoirs and non-fiction bios. Memoirs are, by definition, based on memory and can be faulty and unreliable. They're also often marketed as uplifting and inspiring.

Nowadays there's more scrutiny being put on memoirists like James Frey or Augusten Burroughs. I think for some readers, finding out parts of a story that moved you are untrue or partly invented can feel like a betrayal, and who wants to invest in that? The whole genre of memoirs is being called into questions, this is just one example.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:15 PM on 12/26/2008

"Embraced by Oprah," the enabler of dubious nonfiction writers. Is she gullible or what?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:02 PM on 12/26/2008
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I don't really find it offensive or anything and I'm a Jew. It's not like the writer is a holocaust denier or something.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:39 PM on 12/26/2008
- zkazan I'm a Fan of zkazan 4 fans permalink
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I agree. Also a Yid. Let them have their memories. And if there are some willing to pay to read their story, why not? You know a movie can't be far behind. They're sweet old people. Let them have their shining moment.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:10 PM on 12/26/2008

Let them have their shining moment?

Let me introduce you to any Holocaust survivor of my acquaintance (about 5, but they're all dead now), or any Israeli (quite a few more, still living) and I'll get you to repeat that statement in their presence. The results should be entertaining.

Why not let them "have their shining moment"? .... because they're lying. And the lie - the fence was thin enough to develop a romance through - totally diminishes the real obscene horror that the victims went through, or died because of.

Sorry, 6 million people didn't get turned into bars of soap just to allow a couple of aged fantasists "their shining moment"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:42 PM on 12/26/2008
- photog606 I'm a Fan of photog606 3 fans permalink

Just don't mention... "The Painted Bird".... or "Fragments­"..... or the latest "raised by wolves" saga, "Misha: A Memoire of the Holocaust Years"
http://www.boston.com/ae/books/articles/2008/02/29/author_admits_making_up_memoir_of_surviving_holocaust/

But most definitely, believe THIS story!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:39 PM on 12/26/2008

The 'Wolf Boy, that one's my favorite holocaust story.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:38 PM on 12/26/2008
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Am I the only one that doesn't understand why I'm supposed to care about this?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:38 PM on 12/26/2008
- Stirner I'm a Fan of Stirner 20 fans permalink
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No, me too.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:02 PM on 12/26/2008
- baka432 I'm a Fan of baka432 13 fans permalink
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So, when will they be back on Oprah so she can publicly tar and feather them like she did James Frey? He said almost the exact words, "this was my life as I remember it" and that was not good enough for her. I knew this would happen someday, I hope she feels badly for what she did back then. Memoirs are always subject to factual inaccuraci­es...this would be terrible though, if the story is proven false.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:28 PM on 12/26/2008
- darkday I'm a Fan of darkday 3 fans permalink

She only beat the crap out of Frey & his publisher after she got him to admit he lied. Prior to that she defended him & gave him the benefit of the doubt. This couple however is telling the truth & it's scandalous that you would even compare them to Frey. There's zero evidence that anything in their story is false.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:33 PM on 12/26/2008
- photog606 I'm a Fan of photog606 3 fans permalink

Yep, they're all telling the truth.... until they're not...... why, you could even say you were raised by wolves and everyone would believe it...
http://www.boston.com/ae/books/articles/2008/02/29/author_admits_making_up_memoir_of_surviving_holocaust/

Just ask the "experts".­.....
"Fragments," published in Switzerland in 1995, was almost immediately acclaimed a masterpiece, and it soon became an international bestseller. Wilkomirski won the National Jewish Book Award for autobiography, the Prix Memoire de la Shoah in France and the Jewish Quarterly Literary Prize in Britain. He even received a cash award from the American Orthopsychiatric Association. As his fame grew, Wilkomirski received standing ovations throughout America, at lectures organized by the U.S. Holocaust Museum. Newspapers cited him as an authority on the Holocaust. Some compared him to Primo Levi. Historians assigned "Fragments" to their students.

And then he was exposed. The author of the harrowing Holocaust memoir turned out to be an impostor. He was a gentile who had spent the war in a comfortable Protestant home in Switzerland.
http://www.tomgrossmedia.com/HolocaustHorrors.html

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:47 PM on 12/26/2008
- photog606 I'm a Fan of photog606 3 fans permalink

Exactly...­. and there is absolutely NO precedent to be suspicious of Holocaust memoirs...­..

I mean its not like a woman wrote a best-selling book and fooled all the "Holocaust experts" by claiming to escape the Holocaust by being taken in and raised by wolves in the wilderness or something.­..
http://www.boston.com/ae/books/articles/2008/02/29/author_admits_making_up_memoir_of_surviving_holocaust/

Now THAT would be ridiculous!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:57 PM on 12/26/2008
- grn1 I'm a Fan of grn1 7 fans permalink

If one child was seperated from his parents and sent to kindercamp, there can be no denial of suffering. Now we need to look a little harder at the transgression of right now. Too much suffering that is within our time to help end!!!!!!!!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:22 PM on 12/26/2008
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Buchenwald was not a "Kindercamp" It was a camp for political prisoners, mainly communists, social democrats and union men.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:40 PM on 12/26/2008

The man was a prisoner in a concentration camp. And now people are arguing about how the fence in the camp was constructed? Maybe there was a prior time in their lives before he became a prisoner when his future wife was kind to him. Maybe seeing her bring him apples was an illusion. I myself have been sure of a name or event that occurred when I was a kid only to find out that it happened at a different time and place than I remembered. How could anyone have the heart to give this man a hard time now?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:21 PM on 12/26/2008
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I would agree. Maybe it happened that way maybe it didn't. A prisoner in a concentration camp isn't going to have the best memory. I don't think Oprah should have to apologize for anything and I say this being half Jewish. I might have been in that concentration camp with him.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:41 PM on 12/26/2008
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Well, depends. I'm sure you're American relatives would have bailed you out.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:08 PM on 12/27/2008
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