This is Home Now: Kentucky's Holocaust Survivors Speak (Kentucky Remembered: An Oral History)

by Arwen Donahue

Rebecca Gayle Howell, Joan Ringelheim (Foreword), Douglas A. Boyd (Preface), and James C. Klotter (Preface)

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Book cover for This is Home Now

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At the end of World War II, many thousands of Jewish Holocaust survivors immigrated to the United States from Europe in search of a new beginning. Most settled in major metropolitan areas, usually in predominantly Jewish communities, where proximity to co-religionists offered a measure of cultural and social support. However, some survivors settled in rural areas throughout the country, including in Kentucky, where they encountered an entirely different set of circumstances. Although much scholarship has been devoted to Holocaust survivors living in urban contexts, little has been written about them in the context of their experiences in rural America. Approximately forty Holocaust survivors currently live in Kentucky. Using excerpts from oral history interviews and documentary portrait photography, author Arwen Donahue and photographer Rebecca Gayle Howell tell the fascinating stories of nine of these survivors in a unique work of history and contemporary art. The book focuses on the survivors' lives after their liberation from Nazi concentration camps, illuminating their reasons for settling in Kentucky, their initial reactions to American culture, and their reflections on integrating into rural American life.
  • ISBN10 0813125472
  • ISBN13 9780813125473
  • Publish Date 26 June 2009
  • Publish Status Active
  • Publish Country US
  • Imprint The University Press of Kentucky
  • Format Hardcover
  • Pages 256
  • Language English