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352 pages 156 illustrations
BRAND NEW REVISION by B. Rammerstorfer
Now over 100 years of age, this faithful Austrian brother's 'life and death' experiences and escape from the Nazis make an amazing story.
In his own words: "I have always done my best to apply just principles and to respect the rights of others. That is why no one was ever able to force me to raise a weapon against my fellowman. I have no reason to feel bitter. When I decided to follow this path in 1932, I was well aware that it would mean a hard struggle."
WHEN
LEOPOLD ENGLEITNER WAS NINE YEARS OLD, an event of historical
significance for the whole world and that led to the First World War
took place in his hometown.
Although
Leopold Engleitner and Adolf Hitler, who was sixteen years his senior,
grew up in the same province (Upper Austria) and shared the same
cultural background and education system, the convictions and attitudes
they developed were diametrically opposed. Whereas Adolf Hitler caused
untold suffering to millions as a merciless mass murderer, Leopold
Engleitner devoted his life to peace, refusing to buckle even in the
face of death.
The
ordinary farmhand found the extraordinary courage to follow his
conscience. He refused to serve in Hitler’s army and did not even use
the Nazi greeting “Heil Hitler!” Suffering unspeakable cruelty in three
concentration camps he grew so thin that he weighed less than sixty-two
pounds. Yet nothing and no one could break his will. Astoundingly, he
could easily have had his freedom: all he had to do was sign a paper
renouncing his religious convictions as one of Jehovah’s Witnesses, but
he steadfastly refused. And he never lost his optimism. In the
concentration camp, he even bought a suitcase for the journey home it
seemed impossible he would ever make.
His
unshakable faith in God helped Engleitner, now the oldest known male
concentration camp survivor in the world, to lead a full and happy life
despite constant rejection, and he never lost his zest for life. His
unexpected rehabilitation was achieved thanks to an extraordinary
friendship. Though already far advanced in years, he has between 1999 and 2008 traveled
more than fifty-seven thousand miles across Europe and the USA as a
witness of history to ensure the past is not forgotten and has become a
model of tolerance and peace.
Letters
written by Engleitner during his internment and believed lost for
nearly sixty years were discovered and, combined with original minutes
of police and court proceedings, reports from the concentration camps
and traumatic childhood incidents from one hundred years ago constitute
an impressive firsthand history.
ABOUT
THE AUTHOR: Over the past fifteen years, Bernhard Rammerstorfer, has
conducted intensive research that has enabled him to produce a
historically accurate record of Engleitner’s life that has appeared in
a number of publications and films in various languages and countries.
Rammerstorfer has given talks with Engleitner at schools, universities,
and memorial sites in Europe and the USA, including Columbia and
Stanford Universities. ....and now you can see a documentary of Unbroken Will here
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