And There Was Light by Jacques Lusseyran, Paperback, 9780863155079 | Buy online at Moby the Great

And There Was Light

The Memoir of a Blind Resistance Hero of the Second World War

Author: Jacques Lusseyran and Elizabeth R. Cameron   Series: Rudolf Steiner's Ideas in Practice

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PRODUCT INFORMATION

Summary

This is an autobiography by a blind hero in the French Resistance, who maintained a love of life through the infirmity of blindness, the terror of war and in a Nazi concentration camp.

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Description

'Light is in us even if we have no eyes.'

It is a rare man who can maintain a love of life through the infirmity of blindness, the terrors of war, and the horrors of a Nazi concentration camp. Such a man was Jacques Lusseyran, a French underground resistance leader during the Second World War. This book is his compelling and moving autobiography.

Jacques Lusseyran lost his sight in an accident when he was eight years old. At the age of sixteen, he formed a resistance group with his schoolfriends in Nazi-occupied France. Gradually the small resistance circle of boys widened, cell by cell. In a fascinating scene, the author tells of interviewing prospective underground recruits, 'seeing' them by means of their voices, and in this way weeding out early the weak and the traitorous.

Eventually Jacques and his comrades were betrayed to the Germans and interrogated by the Gestapo. After a fifteen month incarceration in Buchenwald, the author was one of thirty to survive from an initial shipment of two thousand.

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Critic Reviews

“'This was the most inspiring autobiography I read this year.'-- Jill Hawkes, Towards Wholeness, Autumn 2000'This is a remarkable true story by a remarkable man. This makes gripping reading and left me feeling uplifted and greatly strengthened. Highly recommended.'-- Stephanie Sorrell, New Vision, September 2000”

'This was the most inspiring autobiography I read this year.'
-- Jill Hawkes, Towards Wholeness

'This is a remarkable true story by a remarkable man. This makes gripping reading and left me feeling uplifted and greatly strengthened. Highly recommended.'
-- Stephanie Sorrell, New Vision

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About the Author

Jacques Lusseyran later became a university professor in the United States. He died in a car accident in 1971.

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More on this Book

'Light is in us even if we have no eyes.' It is a rare man who can maintain a love of life through the infirmity of blindness, the terrors of war, and the horrors of a Nazi concentration camp. Such a man was Jacques Lusseyran, a French underground resistance leader during the Second World War. This book is his compelling and moving autobiography. Jacques Lusseyran lost his sight in an accident when he was eight years old. At the age of sixteen, he formed a resistance group with his schoolfriends in Nazi-occupied France. Gradually the small resistance circle of boys widened, cell by cell. In a fascinating scene, the author tells of interviewing prospective underground recruits, 'seeing' them by means of their voices, and in this way weeding out early the weak and the traitorous. Eventually Jacques and his comrades were betrayed to the Germans and interrogated by the Gestapo. After a fifteen month incarceration in Buchenwald, the author was one of thirty to survive from an initial shipment of two thousand.

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Product Details

Publisher
Floris Books
Published
1st March 1985
Format
Paperback
Pages
246
ISBN
9780863155079

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17 Sep 2024
Kim
Such a beautiful description of the light in the first half of the book...worth reading just for this!
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