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Full Description
This autobiographical narrative provides a unique personal account of the life of a Volga German under the Bolshevik Revolution and subsequent famine, agricultural collectivization, and Stalinist regime with its persecution of minorities including ethnic Germans in the Soviet Union. The fact that its author, master miller Heinrich Neuwirt (1902-1953), survived as long as he did is a testimony to the resourcefulness, determination to survive, and capacity to endure hardship he evinced as he was repeatedly ensnared in Stalin's net, imprisoned, enslaved, and finally sent to the Russian front in a penal army. Neuwirt only managed to produce his account as a result of finding refuge in West Germany after the war, and although the manuscript made it to Volga German relatives in the United States, nothing came of publication efforts since it was written in German. The value of this manuscript lies in its first-person documentation of Volga German life under Stalin. German professor and literary scholar Virginia L. Lewis has rendered Neuwirt's original German account into faithful English translation.
Contents
Foreword by Helga Neuwirt Bera - Acknowledgments - Translator's Introduction - Childhood on the Volga River - Revolution! - Famine - Back in My Homeland - The Unexpected Harvest of 1922 and the Start of My Career under Communism - Five Years in a Responsible Post - My Political Responsibilities - What Would the Year 1935 Bring? - In Prison - My Short-Lived Acquittal - Flight and Persecution - From Fugitive to Prisoner of War.