The most moving Holocaust diary published since Anne Frank". (Telegraph). Helga's Diary is a young girl's remarkable first-hand account of life in a concentration camp during World War II. Like The Diary of Anne Frank this is a publication of international importance & a book that will endure for decades. In 1938 when her diary begins Helga is eight years old. Alongside her father & mother & the 45 000 Jews who live in Prague she endures the Nazi invasion & regime: her father is denied work schools are closed to her she & her parents are confined to their flat. Then deportations begin & her friends & family start to disappear. In 1941 Helga & her parents are sent to the concentration camp of Terezin where they live for three years. Here Helga documents their daily life
- the harsh conditions disease & suffering as well as moments of friendship creativity & hope
- until in 1944 they are sent to Auschwitz. Helga leaves her diary behind with her uncle who bricks it into a wall to preserve it. Helga's father is never heard of again but miraculously Helga & her mother survive the horrors of Auschwitz the gruelling transports of the last days of the war & manage to return to Prague. As Helga writes down her experiences since Terezin completing the diary she is fifteen & a half. She is one of only a tiny number of Czech Jews who have survived. Reconstructed from her original notebooks which were later retrieved from Terezin & from the loose-leaf pages on which Helga wrote after the war the diary is presented here in its entirety accompanied by an interview with Helga & illustrated with the paintings she made during her time at Terezin. As such Helga's Diary is one of the most vivid & comprehensive testimonies written during the Holocaust ever to have been recovered. Helga Weiss was born in Prague in 1929. Her father Otto was employed in the state bank in Prague & her mother Irena was a dressmaker. Of the 15 000 children brought to Terezin & later deported to Auschwitz only 100 survived the Holocaust. Helga was one of them. On her return to Prague she studied art & has become well known for her paintings. The drawings & paintings that Helga made during her time in Terezin which accompany this diary were published in 1998 in the book Draw What You See (Zeichne was Du siehst). Her father's novel & God saw that it was bad written during his time in Terezin & which she illustrated was published in 2010. In 1954 Helga married the musician Jiri Hosek. She has two children three grandchildren & lives to this day in the flat where she was born."