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An Ordinary Life? Anna Muller

An Ordinary Life? By Anna Muller

An Ordinary Life? by Anna Muller


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Summary

A Jew, Pole, daughter, mother, wife, Communist, migrant, Holocaust survivor, and refugee driven to fight for a better world. Ordinary or anything but? In Tonia Lechtman's life, the lofty and the quotidian intertwined, making everything she did both monumental and mundane. Who was she?

An Ordinary Life? Summary

An Ordinary Life?: The Journeys of Tonia Lechtman, 1918-1996 by Anna Muller

One woman's national, political, ethnic, social, and personal identities impart an extraordinary perspective on the histories of Europe, Polish Jews, Communism, activism, and survival during the twentieth century.
Tonia Lechtman was a Jew, a loving mother and wife, a Polish patriot, a committed Communist, and a Holocaust survivor. Throughout her life these identities brought her to multiple countries-Poland, Palestine, Spain, France, Germany, Switzerland, and Israel-during some of the most pivotal and cataclysmic decades of the twentieth century. In most of those places, she lived on the margins of society while working to promote Communism and trying to create a safe space for her small children.
Born in Lodz in 1918, Lechtman became fascinated with Communism in her early youth. In 1935, to avoid the consequences of her political activism during an increasingly antisemitic and hostile political environment, the family moved to Palestine, where Tonia met her future husband, Sioma. In 1937, the couple traveled to Spain to participate in the Spanish Civil War. After discovering she was pregnant, Lechtman relocated to France while Sioma joined the International Brigades. She spent the Second World War in Europe, traveling with two small children between France, Germany, and Switzerland, at times only miraculously avoiding arrest and being transported east to Nazi camps. After the war, she returned to Poland, where she planned to (re)build Communist Poland. However, soon after her arrival she was imprisoned for six years. In 1971, under pressure from her children, Lechtman emigrated from Poland to Israel, where she died in 1996.
In writing Lechtman's biography, Anna Muller has consulted a rich collection of primary source material, including archival documentation, private documents and photographs, interviews from different periods of Lechtman's life, and personal correspondence. Despite this intimacy, Muller also acknowledges key historiographical questions arising from the lacunae of lost materials, the selective preservation of others, and her own interpretive work translating a life into a life story.

An Ordinary Life? Reviews

A thoroughly researched, nuanced, and deeply moving book, rich with intimate details that do not take away from the broader relevance of Tonia Lechtman's seemingly ordinary life.
An Ordinary Life? is an extraordinary story. As a historian, Anna Muller is both fearless and enormously sensitive. Her research is exhaustive; Tonia Lechtman's story is both enthralling and wrenching. Muller's biography discloses, with painful intimacy, the modern condition of homelessness. Tonia could be the iconic tragic heroine of the twentieth century, a century now revealed through a drama of motherhood.
In beautifully evocative prose, Anna Muller uncovers the remarkable biography of Tonia Lechtman, whose journeys through Poland, Palestine, France, and Switzerland reflect the challenges of her generation. It is a profoundly intimate portrait that explores Lechtman's multiple identities ... with delicacy, empathy, and historical perspective. Through the life story of one woman, Muller sheds new light on the universal predicament of the twentieth-century.
In her biography of Tonia Lechtman, Anna Muller . . . ponders the limits of individual agency in times of social upheavals and catastrophes. What happened to this Jewish woman from Poland and what did she do? What is the price one pays for being overtaken by history? An absorbing book, a heartbreaking life story.
A fascinating study.... The book is a story of one person and it is a history of the twentieth century, with all its conflicts, hopes, experiments, and persecution. It is this world that Tonia Lechtman lived through, and it is a world that she also helped shape. Anna Muller succeeds in explaining the intersections of gender, class, and ethnicity, especially for Polish Jewish women's lives. This book will engage you and make you want to know more about the last century and about how we understand the past and the present.
A Jew, a Communist, a mother, a refugee, a political idealist, a victim of postwar Stalinism in Poland: the life of Tonia Lechman through conflicting identities and the horrors of the twentieth century, brilliantly told by an academic.

About Anna Muller

Anna Muller is the Frank and Mary Padzieski Endowed Professor in Polish/Polish American/Eastern European Studies at the University of Michigan-Dearborn. She is the author of If the Walls Could Speak: Inside a Women's Prison in Communist Poland and is a former curator at the Museum of the Second World War in Gdansk, Poland.

Additional information

NGR9780821424971
9780821424971
0821424971
An Ordinary Life?: The Journeys of Tonia Lechtman, 1918-1996 by Anna Muller
New
Hardback
Ohio University Press
2023-03-07
376
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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