Over the Green Hill: A German Jewish Memoir, 1913-1943

Front Cover
Fordham Univ Press, 1999 - Biography & Autobiography - 179 pages

Originally published in Germany in 1997, Lotte Strauss's Over the Green Hill: Personal Memoir, Germany 1913-43, was begun in 1975 as a letter to her daughter. It took twenty years to write the complete story, and by then, was no longer a letter, but a book.

Lotte Strauss was born one year before the beginning of World War I. She spent her formative years observing how the mood of Post War Germany turned anti-Semitic. The Gestapo came for Strauss during October of 1942, stating that she was to join her parents on a 'resettlement' to the east. Realizing that to comply, that to take such orders would have dire consequences, Strauss managed to slip out the door of her apartment while the Gestapo's attention was momentarily diverted, and make it to her husband, Herbert in Berlin. The Strausses, together, spent the next six months hiding in Germany, planning for their escape, and continuing to evade the Gestapo by just seconds. In May, 1943, they managed to slip across the Swiss border.

From inside the book

Selected pages

Contents

Childhood Salzkotten and Wolfenbuttel 19131920
1
Going to School Wolfenbuttel 19201933
18
Marriage Emigration Divorce Berlin Milan Kladow 19331938
38
The Outbreak of the War Herbert Forced Labor Berlin 19391942
41
The Deportation of My Parents Flight from the Gestapo Berlin October 24 1942
50
Hiding in Berlin October 24 1942April 29 1943
65
Our Helpers
139
Crossing the Border Imprisoned and Interned in Switzerland May 1 1943July 1943
141
1958 19831990
169
Epilogue
Copyright

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Popular passages

Page 89 - Appendix, note preceding section i), and no nation had then declared war against us. But the existence of a war is not dependent upon a formal declaration of war. Wars are being waged today that began without any declaration of war. The attack by the Japanese on Pearl Harbor on December 7. 1941, is the latest illustration. This is not a modern method, for it has been said that, from out of one hundred and eighteen wars that occurred between 1700 and 1872, in hardly ten did formal declarations precede...
Page 171 - ... unmistakable pattern (I could still describe it), the table on which I had done my homework, my father's leather chair, even the little print of Rubens's baby son. I could not walk one step further into that apartment: I felt nauseated, my stomach turned, words failed me: I had to leave, no matter what the others thought.
Page 83 - It seemed as if he had all the time in the world as he sat opposite me and listened to the story of our escape and the deportation of my parents.
Page 45 - ... invaded Paris, Benjamin fled to Lourdes and Marseille. In Marseille he managed to get a transit visa to Spain. However, on 26 September 1940, when the group of people with whom he had made the escape wanted to cross the border in the small Spanish border town Port Bou, they were told that the day before the border had been closed and that their visas were no longer accepted. The Spanish customs officers told them that the next day Spanish police officers would take them back to France, which...
Page 47 - A new chapter in this bloody story began on June 22, 1941, when Hitler launched his attack on the Soviet Union.
Page 17 - Put off thy shoes, for the place whereon thou standest is holy ground
Page 31 - Tochter — were educated to become teachers of other aspiring young women during a time when the women's movement was still in its infancy and not many professions were open to them.
Page 32 - Keitel, sentenced to death for war crimes at the Nuremberg trials in 1946.
Page 142 - He addressed me in much the same way as the young man had done, using almost the same words.

About the author (1999)

Lotte Strauss lives in New York City with her husband, Herbert.

Bibliographic information