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Available April 2004
1-55380-011-7
BISAC: BIO018000, HIS043000, HIS010010
6 x 9 220 pp
20 b&w photos, trade paper
$21.95 Cdn, $17.95 US
Holocaust Memoir, History

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No Time to Mourn
By Leon Kahn
Growing
up Jewish in the little town, or shtetl, of Eisiskes
near the Polish-Lithuanian border, Leon Kahn experienced
a peaceful childhood until September 1, 1939 when Hitler’s
forces attacked Poland. Only sixteen years of age,
Kahn watched as the women and children of his community
were herded into a gravel pit and murdered. Realizing that
to stay meant certain death, Kahn tore off his yellow star
of David identifying him as a Jew, and fled with his father,
brother and sister to the Polish forests and the uncertain
welcome of a few farmers who, at risk to their own lives,
would offer temporary food and shelter. Here Kahn tells
the little known story of the family groups of Jews and
partisan fighters, composed of Russians from Siberia and
Poles, who roamed the forests outside the towns in search
of food and weapons. As a partisan fighter, Kahn was
given professional guerilla training and soon became an
expert in blowing up German trains. The story of the
partisan struggle is as engrossing as it is terrible, for
Kahn describes in detail those uncertain times when one
never knew who was friend, who was enemy. The final
irony may well have come at the end of the war when both
the Russian and the American forces, one after the other,
detained Kahn for a time as an enemy alien. Eventually,
however, his search for freedom was successful: the memoir
ends with his immigration to Canada in 1948 and his discovery
in Vancouver that “this is my home now.” This
volume is co-published with the Vancouver Holocaust
Education Centre.
“It is the duty of the survivor to speak of his
experience and share it with his friends and contemporaries. Leon
Kahn has done so in his book, and for this he deserves
our thanks. His story is poignant and its message
eloquent.” — Elie Wiesel
Leon
Kahn was born Leon Kaganowicz in 1925 in Eisiskes,
Poland, near present-day Vilnius, Lithuania. During
the war he fought in eastern Europe with the partisans
against the Nazis. In 1948, lone survivor of
his family, he immigrated to Vancouver, where he
made a living in various small business enterprises
until he became a successful real estate developer,
first with Block Brothers and then with his own company. He
was noted for his humility, his contributions to
the Jewish community and his work as an anonymous
philanthropist. He died in 2003, leaving his
wife, two sons and a daughter.
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