Austrian memory path: Lore Segal and her literary heritage
Austrian memory path: Lore Segal and her literary heritage
In the night of Monday, it became known that the Austrian-American writer Lore Segal died at the age of 96. Born in 1928 as Lore Groszmann, Segal spent her childhood in the Josefstadt in Vienna and experienced the dark clouds of the emerging Nazi dictatorship. The pressure and threats from anti -Semitic attacks forced them to leave their homeland in 1938.
The path initially led the young lore to Fischamend and then as part of one of the first children's transports to Great Britain. These transports were a life -saving measure that helped many Jewish children escape the horror of National Socialism. Their early literary works addressed the horrors under Hitler, which not only reflects their personal experience, but also shows a deeper examination of the history and its effects on individual fate.
a literary heir
lore Segal became an important voice in the literature, which held her experiences and contemporaries in their stories. She not only used writing as a creative expression, but also as a way to keep the memories of what has happened and pass on the teachings from history. Her work often moves in the area of tension between her Jewish roots and the emigration that she experienced.
The writer, who later accepted American citizenship, leaves a remarkable literary contribution. Her texts invite readers to deal with the North American society, which she experienced as a new home after her escape. So her works were immensely valued in the literary world and found echo in discourses on identity, homeland and loss.
The death of Lore Segal marks a loss for the literary world, especially for those who are interested in the processing of Holocaust and Jewish history. Their view of the world, shaped by deep sympathy and the urge, for justice, will be painfully missed by readers and the literary community.
For more information about this important personality, whose life and work also lives on the history of the 20th century, a current report on www.derstandard.at are read.