Children of the Holocaust: Common Games, Play, and Pastimes in Uncommon Times
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Abstract
Hearing the words children and Holocaust, one’s thoughts are almost immediately and invariably drawn to those children who did not survive, particularly to the plight of Anne Frank and her family. There were, however, many who did survive, and the autobiographical and biographical stories of their survival, published predominantly as children’s or young adult fiction because the protagonist is a child or young adult, although the content is far from fiction, provide interesting and poignant insights of their lives in the most difficult of times.
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