Description
Book SynopsisIn August 1942 a thirty-year-old counsel in the Geneva office of the World Jewish Congress sent a cable to Rabbi Stephen Wise in New York with the following message: RECEIVED ALARMING REPORT THAT IN FUHRERS HEADQUARTERS PLAN DISCUSSED AND UNDER CONSIDERATION ALL JEWS IN COUNTRIES OCCUPIED OR CONTROLLED GERMANY NUMBER 3-1/2 TO 4 MILLION SHOULD AFTER DEPORTATION AND CONCENTRATION IN EAST AT ONE BLOW EXTERMINATED TO RESOLVE ONCE FOR ALL JEWISH QUESTION IN EUROPE. Sent by Gerhart Riegner, this first recorded notice of the "Final Solution" came to be known as the Riegner Telegram. It was perhaps the most famous and tragic moment in Riegner's career, but there were many other important and fascinating episodes in his life of service, told now in Never Despair, Riegner's impressive memoir. He recounts his youth in a cultivated, middle-class Jewish family in Germany, and as a young lawyer in Leipzig who fled to Switzerland after Hitler's rise to power in 1933. He worked all his life for the World Jewish Congress and was involved in its most important undertakings: rescue programs and diplomacy in response to the Holocaust; the struggle for broad-scale human rights at the League of Nations and later at the United Nations; relations with Christian churches; advocacy in behalf of North African Jewry; German reparations; and work with international student organizations. In Never Despair he recounts his efforts behind the scenes and offers a firsthand estimate of many of the leading international figures of the past century. This is an essential book for students of the Holocaust and of the Jewish role in world affairs from World War II to the end of the century. With 8 pages of black-and-white photographs.
Trade ReviewNever Despair highlights a life well lived. * Publishers Weekly *
Author of the fateful telegram that alerted Jewish leadership to the Holocaust, Riegner here gives us his own account of his steadfast service. -- Raul Hilberg
There are so many fascinating personal anecdotes as well as history....It is truly a book of record. * Jewish Book World *
Any interested in Jewish history in general will find Never Despair...to be essential reading. * Midwest Book Review *
"This is an invaluable contribution to our knowledge of the Holocaust and the origins of modern international human rights legislation. No one interested in these critical issues of the twentieth century can bypass this volume." -- John T. Pawlikowski, OSM * Catholic Library World *
Proves valuable to historians. * Holocaust and Genocide Studies *