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Review: The Nine Hundred

Whenever you think the horror can’t get any worse in this book, it does, says Marina Gerner

February 18, 2020 16:38
The Nine Hundred
2 min read

The Nine Hundred by Heather Dune Macadam (Hodder & Stoughton, £20)

I happened to read this book on a train from Cologne to Frankfurt. All trains were delayed that day, as a Second World War bomb had been found at the station and was being defused. The past seemed within a hair’s breadth.

On the 25th of March in 1942, almost one thousand young and unmarried Jewish women were forced to board a train in Poprad, Slovakia. Their families were told they’d spend three months working for a shoe factory to aid the government.

Many of the young Jewish women were eager to report for government service. They left their parents’ homes dressed in their best Shabbat clothes, and waved goodbye believing they would soon return. Some sang the national anthem on the way. But the SS and local Hlinka guards, forced them into cattle wagons in what was the first “official” transport to Auschwitz. Soon afterwards, acts of rape, torture and murder followed.

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