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BERLIN – SHANGHAI – NEW YORK |
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This is a vivid and
factual account by an eminent Berlin physician of his family’s escape
from the clutches of Hitler’s regime. The comfortable life of a successful and much loved doctor is destroyed when the Nazi government cancels all Jewish doctors’ licenses to practice medicine. He has no choice but to emigrate. Dr. Friedrichs then relates in graphic detail how he overcomes the bureaucratic nightmare that the Nazis had created to frustrate all Jews’ attempts to escape. He succeeds in bringing his family out, but then suffers eight years of deprivation and illness in Shanghai. There he saves the lives of many refugees by learning to treat unfamiliar tropical diseases, at the same time battling the notorious self-styled “King of the Jews”, the Japanese overseer of Hongkew, Mr. Ghoya. Dr. Friedrichs describes these years of exile from his homeland with remarkable insight, maintaining a keen sense of humor even under desperate conditions. After the war he immigrates to America, where he rebuilds his life, practicing medicine in New York for another twenty years. It is a heartrending report, both personal and historical, full of
detailed observations and unlike any other document left to us by those
fortunate enough to have escaped Hitler. |
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Published
by Cold Tree Press |
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R.W writes: I started reading the book and found it difficult to put down. The book describes in vivid detail the difficulties in getting clearances and permits to emigrate to Shanghai and the uncustomary life in Shanghai in the prewar years '38 and '39. This book is an invaluable addition to the Shanghai Jewish refugee chronicles. |
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