I Promised I Would Tell

Publisher: Facing History and Ourselves

Holocaust educator and survivor Sonia Weitz has often been called a survivor with a poet's eye. Born in Krakow, Poland, she was 11 years old when her family and other Polish Jews were herded into ghettos. Of the 84 members of her family, she and her sister Blanca were the sole survivors of years in ghettos and concentration camps. At an early age she turned to poetry to cope with her emotions. Her memoir, I Promised I Would Tell, includes her story of survival and more than two dozen poems through which she bears witness to the unspeakable.

About Sonia Schreiber Weitz

Sonia Schreiber Weitz was born in 1928 in Krakow, Poland. She was only 11 when the Germans invaded Poland. Sonia and her sister Blanca are the only two surviving members of their family. For three years Sonia lived in displaced persons camps across Austria. It is during this period that Sonia wrote many of the poems found in I Promised I Would Tell, her poetic memoir of her experiences in the Holocaust.

detail

Binding EAN ISBN-10 Pub Date PAGES Language Size Price
E-Book 9780983787051 0983787050 2012-06-30 116 English 0.00 x 0.00 x 0.00 in $9.99

Publicity

Connect

Multimedia

Contributor Platforms

Recent Press

Promo Quotes

Events

Book Signings and Tour Cities

Stolen Lives: The Indigenous Peoples of Canada and The Indian Residential Schools

Stolen Lives: The Indigenous Peoples of Canada and The Indian Residential Schools

by Facing History and Ourselves,

Stolen Lives: The Indigenous Peoples of Canada and the Indian Residential Schools is a groundbreaking resource that provides educators with an examination of the Indian Residential Schools and their long-lasting effects on Canada’s Indigenous Peoples...

read more
Holocaust and Human Behavior

Holocaust and Human Behavior

by Facing History and Ourselves,

Holocaust and Human Behavior leads students through an examination of the history of the Holocaust, while fostering their skills in ethical reasoning, critical thinking, empathy, and civic engagement...

read more
Holocaust and Human Behavior

Holocaust and Human Behavior

by Facing History and Ourselves,

Holocaust and Human Behavior leads students through an examination of the history of the Holocaust, while fostering their skills in ethical reasoning, critical thinking, empathy, and civic engagement...

read more
Complicity, Collaboration, and Resistance

Complicity, Collaboration, and Resistance

by Boulouque, Clémence

Complicity, Collaboration, and Resistance provides an intimate portrait of France under the Nazi occupation. In this ebook, readers will encounter diaries, letters, and memoirs—some translated into English for the first time—from political and religious leaders, intellectuals, immigrants and citizens, Jews and non-Jews, resisters, and collaborators...

read more
Washington's Rebuke to Bigotry

Washington's Rebuke to Bigotry

by Facing History and Ourselves,

George Washington’s 1790 Letter to the Hebrew Congregation in Newport, Rhode Island, a foundational document in the history of religious freedom in the United States, embodies a vision of religious harmony that remains deeply pertinent in our increasingly diverse society...

read more
The Reconstruction Era and The Fragility of Democracy

The Reconstruction Era and The Fragility of Democracy

by Facing History and Ourselves,

The Reconstruction Era and The Fragility of Democracy uses our pedagogical approach to help students examine how a society rebuilds after extraordinary division and trauma, when the ideals of democracy are most vulnerable...

read more
Teaching Mockingbird

Teaching Mockingbird

by Facing History and Ourselves,

Teaching Mockingbird presents educators with the materials they need to transform how they teach Harper Lee’s classic novel To Kill a Mockingbird.  Interweaving the historical context of Depression-era rural Southern life, and informed by Facing History’s pedagogical approach, this resource introduces layered perspectives and thoughtful strategies into the teaching of To Kill a...

read more
The Nanjing Atrocities: Crimes of War

The Nanjing Atrocities: Crimes of War

by Facing History and Ourselves,

The Nanjing Atrocities: Crimes of War details the events unfolding in China and Japan in the years leading up to World War II in East Asia, and the Japanese occupation of the city of Nanjing, China, in 1937...

read more
Shot by Shot: The Holocaust in German-Occupied Soviet Territory

Shot by Shot: The Holocaust in German-Occupied Soviet Territory

by Rubenstein, Joshua

Shot by Shot: The Holocaust in German-Occupied Soviet Territory,an ebook by Joshua Rubenstein, author and associate at Harvard's Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian studies, contains personal survivor testimony and archival video footage as well as primary source documents that provide detailed perspectives of the events unfolding during the Holocaust in Soviet territories...

read more
Race and Membership in American History

Race and Membership in American History

by and Ourselves, Facing History

Race and Membership in American History: The Eugenics Movement focuses on a time in the early 1900s when many people believed that some races, classes, and individuals were superior to others...

read more
Fundamental Freedoms

Fundamental Freedoms

by and Ourselves, Facing History

Surveying Eleanor Roosevelt's early years and then concentrating on her life-long commitment as an activist, Fundamental Freedoms tells of Eleanor's pivotal role in creating the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) in the aftermath of World War II and the Holocaust...

read more
I Promised I Would Tell

I Promised I Would Tell

by Schreiber Weitz, Sonia

Holocaust educator and survivor Sonia Weitz has often been called a survivor with a poet's eye. Born in Krakow, Poland, she was 11 years old when her family and other Polish Jews were herded into ghettos. Of the 84 members of her family, she and her sister Blanca were the sole survivors of years in ghettos and concentration camps. At an early age she turned to poetry to cope with her emotions...

read more
A Convenient Hatred

A Convenient Hatred

by Goldstein, Phyllis

A Convenient Hatred chronicles a very particular hatred through powerful stories that allow readers to see themselves in the tarnished mirror of history. It raises important questions about the consequences of our assumptions and beliefs and the ways we, as individuals and as members of a society, make distinctions between us and them, right and wrong, good and evil...

read more

Similar Titles

  • Holocaust and Human Behavior
  • Holocaust and Human Behavior
  • Complicity, Collaboration, and Resistance
  • Washington's Rebuke to Bigotry
  • The Reconstruction Era and The Fragility of Democracy
  • Teaching Mockingbird
  • The Nanjing Atrocities: Crimes of War
  • Shot by Shot: The Holocaust in German-Occupied Soviet Territory
  • Race and Membership in American History
  • Fundamental Freedoms
  • I Promised I Would Tell
  • A Convenient Hatred
  • Stolen Lives: The Indigenous Peoples of Canada and The Indian Residential Schools