
Condemned to Life
The Diaries and Life of Chajka Klinger
9789653087064
566 pages
Yad Vashem Publications
Overview
In 1943, Chajka Klinger, a key female activist in the Jewish Fighting Organization in Będzin, Poland, was “condemned to life,” chosen by her friends to survive the battle for their existence in order to document their stories. Her diary reveals her anguish as she describes the deportations, the death of loved ones, and the torture she underwent. After her escape from Nazi-occupied Europe, she tried to build a new life for herself in Israel with her husband and three children, but in April 1958, on the eve of the anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, she took her own life. Written by her son, Professor Avihu Ronen, Condemned to Life moves seamlessly between Chajka’s narrative, the historical context, and the author’s personal journey to remember his mother whom he lost at a young age, intimately documenting her life, struggles, and death through stories from those who knew her. The book also confronts contentious historiographical issues, including the mythologizing of the ghetto uprisings, the role of the Judenrat, and the conflict between personal and collective memory. Condemned to Life is an extraordinary portrait of Chajka Klinger, her comrades, and the role of the underground in Nazi-occupied Europe. Dedicated to telling the story of these young fighters and preserving their memory, Ronen’s masterful blend of biography and meticulous historical research will move, inspire, and enlighten readers for generations.Author Bio
Avihu Ronen is a historian and a retired professor of Tel-Hai College and the University of Haifa. He has published many books and papers in the fields of Holocaust studies, leadership studies, and the history of Socialism. Among his Hebrew publications are: On Leadership (Ministry of Defense, 1989-2006); The Battle for Life: Hashomer Hatzair in Hungary, 1944 (Yad Ya'ari, 1994); and Out of the Consensus: Kerem Shalom, a Small Kibbutz on the Border of the Gaza Strip (Kinneret Zmora-Bitan Dvir, 2024). Following its publication in 2011, the Hebrew edition of Condemned to Life was awarded the 2013 Yad Vashem International Book Prize for Holocaust Research.