Rating:  Summary: Beautiful Memories Review: ...I never saw another butterfly... is a book which holds a collection of children's drawings and poems that were created at the Terezin concentration camp from 1942-1944. In this moving book several children's works are displayed, taken from a much larger collection. The book begins by telling the background of the Terezin concentration camp and then it lays out numerous beautiful pictures along with many moving poems. At the end of the book a short summary is given in the epilogue and afterword about the works of the children. Also included in the book is a catalog of the poems and drawings, naming the authors if known, their dates of birth, and their dates of death. ...I never saw another butterfly... is a moving illustration of what it was like for a child to live in a concentration camp during WWII. The drawings often depict a life full of beauty and it seemed amazing to me that the children were able to, at this time, see all the beautiful things around them even though they were in the midst of death. The poems on the other hand often portray the longing of wanting to be in a safe place elsewhere, and they also relate more of the harsh reality of what was really going on at the concentration camps. The book is tied together through the contrast of the brightly colored paintings with the dim spirit of the poems. The reader will instantly be amazed at the talents of these young children, most under the age of 14, and at the same time feel a horrible sense of pity for these children, whom most perished in Auschwitz. The book is a wonderful and diverse collection of works, although there could have been a more diverse collection of authors included, instead of multiple works by the same author. It is amazing to notice that some of the children who drew some of the pictures survived the war and even some have gone on to be artists today. This mere fact leaves the reader with a little bit of hope that the unforgettable memories of these children will forever be painted into the public, so that everyone can remember them in honor.
Rating:  Summary: Beautiful Memories Review: ...I never saw another butterfly... is a book which holds a collection of children's drawings and poems that were created at the Terezin concentration camp from 1942-1944. In this moving book several children's works are displayed, taken from a much larger collection. The book begins by telling the background of the Terezin concentration camp and then it lays out numerous beautiful pictures along with many moving poems. At the end of the book a short summary is given in the epilogue and afterword about the works of the children. Also included in the book is a catalog of the poems and drawings, naming the authors if known, their dates of birth, and their dates of death. ...I never saw another butterfly... is a moving illustration of what it was like for a child to live in a concentration camp during WWII. The drawings often depict a life full of beauty and it seemed amazing to me that the children were able to, at this time, see all the beautiful things around them even though they were in the midst of death. The poems on the other hand often portray the longing of wanting to be in a safe place elsewhere, and they also relate more of the harsh reality of what was really going on at the concentration camps. The book is tied together through the contrast of the brightly colored paintings with the dim spirit of the poems. The reader will instantly be amazed at the talents of these young children, most under the age of 14, and at the same time feel a horrible sense of pity for these children, whom most perished in Auschwitz. The book is a wonderful and diverse collection of works, although there could have been a more diverse collection of authors included, instead of multiple works by the same author. It is amazing to notice that some of the children who drew some of the pictures survived the war and even some have gone on to be artists today. This mere fact leaves the reader with a little bit of hope that the unforgettable memories of these children will forever be painted into the public, so that everyone can remember them in honor.
Rating:  Summary: A MUST for all educators and parents! Review: A serious glimpse into the minds and hearts of the young Jewish authors and artisits of a Nazi concentration camp, this book leads the reader/viewer into the daily terrors and remarkably, the simple reamaining pleasures of life.An excellent resource for a World War II unit for all ages.
Rating:  Summary: The Children in the Camps Review: Although many people know that the children suffered just as much in the ghettos as the adults did, I think it is often overlooked. The adults in the ghettos are often focused on because they are the ones who had to make the decisions and deal with the day-to-day life. But, the children suffered too. They were aware of some of the problems around them and were aware of the differences in their lifestyles. They were aware that they had been stripped away from all they had ever known.In the book "...I never saw another butterfly..." a vision of what the children saw and endured before many of them were killed is portrayed. The drawings show the children were partially aware of the terrible things going on and of their desire to once again be in a happier place. There are pictures of what they see around them at the time and pictures of the homes and families they remember from before they were put in the ghettos. As for the poems and diary entries, they too showed how the children neglected to see how they were being oppressed. Some showed a strong sense of heritage, such as I am a Jew (57). The lines "I am a Jew and will be a Jew forever. Even if I should die from hunger." show how the children knew it was bad that they were hungry, but still had faith in their religion. The poem A Letter to Daddy (36) shows a child who wants to return to the life he once found to be normal. "You promised to bring me books because, truly, I have nothing to read [...] I will surely be grateful for this." This line shows the naivety of the child, who did not understand why he had no books to read. All of the poems and diary entries in the book show the sadness in the children and the pain they each endured by having all they had known taken away.
Rating:  Summary: "I Never Saw Another Butterfly" Review Review: Hana Valavkova's "I Never Saw Another Butterfly..." although focusing on the ghetto of Terezin through poems, paintings, and drawings made by the children there, does an amazing job of demonstrating just how powerful Hitler and his agenda were; not just in terms of history, or the past, but in terms of emotion, depth, and human life. The works illustrated in this text show the wide range of emotion prevalent in such horrendous circumstances. And, even more touching, the emotion prevalent amongst the children, both survivors and victims of death, forced to endure the very suffering that no one, especially a child, should have to bear. While one can easily discern fact or history from Valavkova's "I Never Saw Another Butterfly..." the poems and drawings offer much more than just fact. They offer emotion, hope, maturity, and haunting despair. They reveal much more than the conditions of Terezin's ghetto, but also the condition of human life in these circumstances. The whole of this book is one that offers each and every reader the opportunity to not only gain knowledge about the holocaust and the people forced to endure it's conditions, but also the opportunity to experience and attempt to understand the emotion that existed alongside the hunger, disease, and terror in the ghettos of Nazi Germany. In essence, Valavkova's text offers great insight into the emotion, depth, and life of those that fell victim to Hitler's anti-semitic ideology. Her book presents each reader with the opportunity to open up their hearts and feel what history is all about.
Rating:  Summary: I will never forget about this book for as long as I live. Review: How do you rate a book like this?! There is no way to say whether a child's poem or picture is a 5 or a 10. Every page is exquisite, filled with the shocking reality that childhood existed during the Holocaust, even if brief. I first owned this book as a child. It haunted me then, and still does. What a blessing to rediscover it! I would say this book is appropriate for all. Truly, it is an intimate look at how the Holocaust affected our children. The power evoked from some of the pieces leaves a person very introspectrive. I remember bringing this book into show and tell, both in Hebrew school and elementary school. My teachers were able to use it as a good starting point for the discussion of the Holocaust, and other genocides. Use this book to educate yourself, and use it to educate others.
Rating:  Summary: A reinactor Review: I am currently working on the play for "I never Saw AnotherButterfly"through my school. It is startling to reinact the livesof these real children. We are using the art and poetry from this book to highten the awarness for the audience that these are real people.
Rating:  Summary: I Never Saw Another Butterfly Review: I recently was in the play "I Never Saw Another Butterfly". One of my teachers brought in this book for our class to look at. My friend and I played the parts of the Nazis. We saw this book and it brought tears to our eyes. We saw drawings and poems done by the children that were mentioned in the play. This book is very interesting, but I suggest you read it with a box of Kleenex.
Rating:  Summary: I never saw another butterfly Review: I was recently in the play I never saw another butterfly. I played one of the children durning the holocaust. In the play I read a poem that was in the book I never saw another butterfly, and the poem brought me to tears. When our director brought in the actual book, and I read all of the other poems and saw all of the other drawings i was overwhelmed by the pain and struggle that was portrayed in the book. I hope that others are as lucky to read this book as i was.
Rating:  Summary: Tales from the children who didn't come back. Review: Terezin Concentration Camp held, between 1942 and 1944, fifteen thousand children under the age of fifteen years old, for various lengths of time, before the children were carted out to other camps to die. A few teachers came in with sparse quantities of art supplies, and they used art "lessons" as a way of offering art therapy. "I Never Saw Another Butterfly" is a representation of those surviving pictures, which are now housed at the Holocaust Museum in Washington DC, USA. Illustrating the pictures, as it were, are collections of poetry and prose, and excerpts from a few journals. I wish I spoke Dutch (?) so that I could read contributor Helga Weissova's "Das Kunstlerische Schaffen" -- I'd like to see what else she has to say. I wish that Soña Spitzovã, who drew my favorite of the drawings ("Starlight In A Dark Room," page 53) hadn't died in Auschwitz before she was even fifteen years old. The things these children saw! They noticed the trains, the transports. Helga Weissova did a painting of a woman, JUDE star on her clothing, whose hair was searched for lice. They also saw flowers in jelly jars on tables. They remembered their own beds. I think that art exists, in part, to speak when we are no longer able to. This book was purchased from my amazon.com wishlist. I think I'll be getting a copy for a friend who's in school to be an art therapist; I think she'll get a lot out of it.
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