National Repository of Grey Literature 2 records found  Search took 0.01 seconds. 
Hanus Hachenburg 1929 -1944
Pražák, Daniel ; Míšková, Alena (advisor) ; Koura, Petr (referee)
This work is focused on the fate of the Jewish poet Hanuš Hachenburg, who was murdered in a gas chamber in Auschwitz-Birkenau at the age of fourteen. In the first part, the work maps his life from his unclear childhood, first with parents and later his life in the orphanage, to the transport to Theresienstadt and the stay in Auschwitz - Birkenau. The part of his life spent in Theresienstadt will be dealt with in detail, particularly concerning his literary work for the boys' magazine Vedem. At the end of this part, the living conditions in the Theresienstadt family camp and its organization are described. The second part of the work deals with the second life of Hanuš Hachenburg. The author describes numerous projects, together with their results, dedicated to the person of Hanuš Hacheburg in the last five years. KEYWORDS Theresienstadt, holocaust, Auschwitz, poetry, Vedem, Hanuš Hachenburg
The Importance of the Journal Vedem in the Terezín Ghetto
ŠVECOVÁ, Lenka
Vedem is a name of a Czech magazine, which was secretely published in the Terezín Ghetto in 1942{--} 1944. It´s existence is connected with Valter Eisinger, a ghetto teacher, who looked after Jewish boys in so-called block L417 and who was always supporting their cultural development and their creativity. Boys at of fourteen to sixteen undertook the publishing and the magazine was coming out every Friday for almost two years. The main themes were different columns, poems and novels but also philosophical essays or critical articles. The most important persons, Petr Ginz, who was a magazines general editor, or poetist Hanuš Hachenburg, bouth died in 1944 in gas chambers. After the World War II the magazine was taken to Praque in May 1945 but the new government in Czechoslovakia rejected its publishing. The first shortend version came out in 80´s under the name ``We are children just the same: Vedem, the secret magazine of the boys of Terezín.``

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