Questions I Am Asked about the Holocaust: Young Reader's Edition

by Hédi Fried (Author) Laila Ekboir (Illustrator)

Questions I Am Asked about the Holocaust: Young Reader's Edition
Reading Level: 4th − 5th Grade

A young readers’ edition of the bestselling book from Auschwitz survivor Hédi Fried that answers lasting questions about the Holocaust.

Hédi Fried was nineteen when the Nazis arrested her family and transported them to Auschwitz. While there, apart from enduring the daily horrors at the concentration camp, she and her sister were forced into hard labor before being released at the end of the war.

After settling in Sweden, Hédi devoted her life to educating young people about the Holocaust. In her 90s, she decided to take the most common questions, and her answers, and turn them into a book so that children all over the world could understand what had happened.

This is a deeply human book that urges us never to forget and never to repeat.

“Timeless lessons taught with simple eloquence.”
Kirkus Reviews

  • The perfect conversation starter for educators to teach young people about the reality of the Holocaust from lived experience.
  • Wonderful companion piece to Art Speigelman’s Maus.
  • In the wake of recent reports that a shocking proportion of young people in the US know little to nothing about the Holocaust, alongside a concerning new wave of antisemitism in the US and Europe, this deeply personal first-hand account is especially timely.
Select format:
Hardcover
$18.95

Kirkus

Sheds light on a devastating topic with empathy, sensitivity, and honesty.

Review quotes

"Questions I Am Asked About the Holocaust is nothing short of remarkable ... Hedi's answers to the questions posed are so personal, genuine, and heartfelt, you feel like you are sitting in the seat beside her ... Even the most knowledgeable person on the topic of World War II and the Holocaust will learn something from this book ... Librarians should purchase this so it is available to all students from middle school up. Teachers for all ages should also have a classroom copy ... [T]his young readers edition ends with a huge amount of reading guides, teacher lessons, and even potential student activities. A one stop shop for learning. Should we (librarians/readers) put this on the top of our 'to read' piles? Absolutely. It should be the first book that you purchase."

Youth Services Book Review, starred review

"While many authors have produced great works about the Holocaust, this sort of first-person narrative is the best source of true information. Every library should add this book to its collection. Social studies teachers would find this a highly valuable source for discussions on the Holocaust (Fried herself even provides a list of discussion questions in the text). I highly recommend the purchase of this book."
School Library Connection, highly recommended

"Absolutely one of the most honest, informative and accessible books for young readers on the Holocaust told from a survivor who has spent her adult life as a public speaker."
—Jesica Sweedler DeHart, Neill Public Library

"I think this book is vital in classrooms, especially right now while people are attempting to erase history that makes them 'uncomfortable'. Hedi's experience is a time capsule and is worded in such a way that makes sense to a wide variety of young people. I especially hope young refugees who read this book see themselves, but see that their life can be so much better than what she experienced."
—Erikka Sawdey, Pickerington Public Library, Pickerington, Ohio

"Important look into the Holocaust through such a gentle and clever writer. Approachable and necessary."
—Kira Wizner, Merritt Bookstore

"I read Heidi's book for adults and was very glad to see it was being adopted for young readers. Such a thoughtful, first-hand reflection with illustrations included could be an invaluable resource for educators and guardians. The question and answer format is accessible and I think, will engender among young people a willingness to understand different perspectives."
—Destinee Hodge, East City Bookshop

"A must read. I do not compare directly to The Diary of Anne Frank ... however it is a similarly powerful read. Hedi Fried gives an eyewitness and direct account of her experiences during the Holocaust. She uses a Q&A from the most frequently asked questions she has received over the years and nothing is off limits. Her quest is to educate so that generations to come do not hate. I was completely enthralled by the story and the illustrations (Laila Ekboir)."
—Linda Bakersmith, The Novel Neighbor

"This edition of Hédi Fried's book with the most common questions students have asked her about her experience as a survivor of Auschwitz and other camps during WWII is aimed at young readers. The illustrations help bring her thoughtful and candid answers alive. What a great classroom resource to spark discussions about one of the darkest periods of history, which is exactly what she spent the last several decades of her life doing: educating young people about the Holocaust."
—Anne Bark, Newtonville Books

"This should be required reading for all ages. So much of what is written about here is far too close to what is happening in the world today. Read this book. Sit with it."
—Gabrielle Belisle, An Unlikely Story

"This is an excellent read. In particular, the question and answer format sets it apart from other first-person accounts of the Holocaust."
—Alessandra Nicodemo, Lee Memorial Library

"This is terrific in that I was utterly engrossed in not only what questions are asked of Hedi but the astute and depthful way she answers them. I began to read the other evening and went all the way to the end before putting this book down. It's also potent in the ways our author touches on current issues with how we treat 'others' as to how we become divided and in worst case hurtful to those unlike ourselves. a big thumbs up and NOT just for the younger generation!"
—Sheryl Cotleur, Copperfield's Books

"Through questions she has been asked most, Questions I Am Asked About The Holocaust is a stoically raw and deeply human account of the author's experiences throughout the Holocaust and surviving Auschwitz. An important, wise, and extremely powerful book."
—Amanda Zirn Hudson, Bethany Beach Books

"While Questions I Am Asked About the Holocaust is very easy to read, the questions it raises are very hard to answer. Fried, in simple, straightforward prose, answers questions that children have asked her about her experiences. A must-have for parents, but be prepared to answer some hard questions yourself."
—Lee Virden Geurkink, Monkey and Dog Books

"Fried, who has written a memoir about her imprisonment at Auschwitz, has complied a book with answers to some of the most common questions posed to her by students she meets during her visits with schools to inform and educate people about the horrors she and millions of others faced at the hands of the Nazis. The questions are often simple, as children's questions often are, but Fried's answers are anything but as she describes how insidious evil is and how easily the masses are fooled into falling for the lies and prejudices of a government looking for a scapegoat. Fried's words are especially important in the growing age of nationalism and ignorance. A book that belongs in every library, school and public in the country and one that should be required reading for our elected officials."
—Rosemary Smith, Williams Library, Oakland, Maine

"It is the telling detail that gives her testimony its particular power ... This little book, with its reminder "there are no stupid questions, nor any forbidden ones, but there are some ... that have no answer", is a moving record of one woman's experience."
Nick Rennison, The Sunday Times

"Fried was 19 when she and her family were sent from Hungary to Auschwitz. Her parents were murdered, but she and her sister survived. They both made a home in Sweden and, ever since, Fried, now 94, has talked to students about her experiences. This slim but powerful volume, sensitively translated by Alice Olsson, comprises answers to the questions she is most frequently asked, such as: "Why did you not fight back?" and "What helped you to survive?", "Are you able to forgive?" Fried answers with humanity, candor and thoughtfulness in a book that should be required reading for all young people."
Hannah Beckerman, The Guardian

"[S]ince these questions come from children, they quickly reach a level of intimacy that most adults would be afraid to venture into...Questions I Am Asked About the Holocaust is a collection of Hédi's gentle, honest answers to these questions over the years. With sensitivity and complete candor, Fried answers these questions and more in this deeply human book that urges us never to forget and never to repeat."
—The Jewish Standard, Ontario

"A must read. I do not compare directly to The Diary of Anne Frank ... however it is a similarly powerful read. Hedi Fried gives an eyewitness and direct account of her experiences during the Holocaust. She uses a Q&A from the most frequently asked questions she has received over the years and nothing is off limits. Her quest is to educate so that generations to come do not hate. I was completely enthralled by the story and the illustrations (Laila Ekboir)."
—Linda Bakersmith, The Novel Neighbor

"Now 94, Fried's largeness of spirit emanates from every considered response to even the most confronting questions asked of her. One senses that her replies are not only educative but therapeutic, especially for young people grappling with their own questions about the meaning of life. While most of her experiences of this period are inescapably dark, there were moments of light that assumed enormous significance."
Fiona Capp, The Saturday Age

"Hédi Fried is a remarkable woman and her writing offers important insights into truly terrible events and the slow, insidious way in which hatred can be fostered. Questions I Am Asked About the Holocaust is an easy to read account of things that are almost too horrible to comprehend. The essays represent an individual's reflections on matters that touch the whole of humanity and, as Fried hopes, the lessons she has to teach about the past should serve as a warning for the future." FIVE STARS
Erin Britton, New Books Magazine

"[M]agnificent ... difficult and emotional—and very important. As Fried points out in the preface: 'the younger generation must keep the memory of the Holocaust alive if we want to ensure that it is never repeated.'"
@dadsuggests

"It's the straightforwardness of the book—and the fact that Fried is so candid in her answers—that makes this book so important."
Shelly Gare, The Sydney Institute

"Anyone who can remember that time, anyone who can remember someone who could remember, or anyone who feels the instinctive urge to be one with the humanity of memory, and the memory of humanity, cannot but be moved deeply and quite actively by Fried's book."
Bookanista

"Candid and unflinching, deeply personal and sensitive, this is the perfect book for anyone, young or old, wanting to learn more about the Holocaust and why we must never forget-especially as the last surviving witnesses are lost to us."
Leanne Edimistone, Courier Mail

Praise for The Road to Auschwitz:

"Fried's tale is not solely one of suffering. She is a survivor, and this is a testimony to the ingenuity and luck that contributed to her survival and that of her sister and friends. As Fried reminds us: 'We must tell of this inhuman thing that was done in the twentieth century. It must not be forgotten.'"
Publishers Weekly

"[Fried's] grim struggle to survive death and labor camps and the start of her brave efforts to create a meaningful life in Sweden are recounted with vivid and deeply moving simplicity."
Jewish Chronicle

"Fried's straightforward, candid answers are as informative as they are moving. This book should be required school reading."
—Kylie Northover, The Age

"An essential addition for those learning about the Holocaust, refugees, and the complexities of WWII."

—Meg Barclay, The School Librarian

Classification
Non-fiction
ISBN-13
9781957363233
Lexile Measure
950
Guided Reading Level
-
Publisher
Scribble Us
Publication date
April 04, 2023
Series
-
BISAC categories
YAN006030 - Young Adult Nonfiction | Biography & Autobiography | Historical
YAN025220 - Young Adult Nonfiction | History | United States - 20th Century
YAN047080 - Young Adult Nonfiction | Religion | Judaism
YAN025090 - Young Adult Nonfiction | History | Holocaust
Library of Congress categories
World War, 1939-1945
Jews
Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)
Holocaust survivors
Romania
Persecutions
Auschwitz (Concentration camp)
Fried, Hedi
Sighetu Marmatiei

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