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Letters to Sala: A Play
Barnes and Noble
Letters to Sala: A Play
Current price: $15.00
Barnes and Noble
Letters to Sala: A Play
Current price: $15.00
Size: Paperback
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“A stirring drama” (
Broadway World
) adapted by award-winning playwright Arlene Hutton from the book
Sala’s Gift
by Ann Kirschner,
Letters to Sala
is a remarkable play about a young girl’s personal and emotional Holocaust journey.
Sala Garncarz, daughter of a rabbi and the youngest of 11 children, was 16 in 1940 when she volunteered to take her sister’s place in a Nazi work camp. Over the next five years, she endured seven camps and collected, at great risk to herself, a cache of more than 350 letters, postcards, photographs, and other documents sent to her and others during that time. Sala survived the war and moved to America, where, more than 50 years later, she and her family donated her remarkable collection of letters and documents to the New York Public Library, where it went on to earn wide attention.
Through these letters that Sala managed to hide and keep safe,
tells the story of her experiences and those of others in the web of Nazi labor camps in occupied Europe, a less-documented and less-familiar aspect of the Holocaust.
has been produced off-Broadway at the Barrow Group and with more than 100 productions. This book includes photos, letters, and introductions by the playwright and by Sala’s daughter Ann Kirschner.
Broadway World
) adapted by award-winning playwright Arlene Hutton from the book
Sala’s Gift
by Ann Kirschner,
Letters to Sala
is a remarkable play about a young girl’s personal and emotional Holocaust journey.
Sala Garncarz, daughter of a rabbi and the youngest of 11 children, was 16 in 1940 when she volunteered to take her sister’s place in a Nazi work camp. Over the next five years, she endured seven camps and collected, at great risk to herself, a cache of more than 350 letters, postcards, photographs, and other documents sent to her and others during that time. Sala survived the war and moved to America, where, more than 50 years later, she and her family donated her remarkable collection of letters and documents to the New York Public Library, where it went on to earn wide attention.
Through these letters that Sala managed to hide and keep safe,
tells the story of her experiences and those of others in the web of Nazi labor camps in occupied Europe, a less-documented and less-familiar aspect of the Holocaust.
has been produced off-Broadway at the Barrow Group and with more than 100 productions. This book includes photos, letters, and introductions by the playwright and by Sala’s daughter Ann Kirschner.