- Henryk Grynberg
Henryk Grynberg (born in
1936 inWarsaw ) was a Polish writer and actor who survived theNazi occupation. He was an award-winning novelist, short-story writer, poet, playwright and essayist who had authored twenty books ofprose andpoetry and twodrama s. Grynberg, known as the “chronicle r of the fate of thePolish Jews ”, tackled in his writings theHolocaust experience and the post-Holocaust trauma. [http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shtetl/relations/grynbergbio.html Biography: Henryk Grynberg, Shtetl, Frontline, PBS.org and WGBH.org (undated)] , retrieved on: July 27, 2007] [http://www.culture.pl/en/culture/artykuly/os_grynberg_henryk Profiles: Literature, Henryk Grynberg, Polska2000.pl, Stowarzyszenie Willa Decjusza, Adam Mickiewicz Institute, and Culture.pl (undated)] , retrieved on: July 27, 2007]Personal survival
Grynberg and his mother were the only survivors from their family. He spent the years 1942 to 1944 in hiding places. After the war, he lived in
Łódź andWarsaw .Collaboration with Communists
On 11th October 1956 he signed as an undercovered agent of the 7th Department of Polish Agency for Internal Security- code name "reporter". (documented by Polish Historical Institute and published at "Zycie Warszawy" on 1 December 2006). Grynberg was pressured by the SB, denied that he informed on any one, and reportedly revealed his recruitment to the FBI. See Ted Lipien
The beginnings of a writer
In 1959, Grynberg graduated from
Warsaw University with a master’s degree injournalism . As an actor, Grynberg had connections with theJewish State Theater company in Warsaw. It was during this time when he started publishing prose and poetry.While the Jewish State Theater company was on tour in the United States in late 1967, he refused to return to Poland. This
defection was an act of protest against thecommunist regime's anti-Jewish propaganda, and against thecensorship of his writings.In 1971, after two years of attending graduate studies at
UCLA , Grynberg received an M.A. inRussian Literature and moved toWashington, D.C. , where Grynberg worked for theU.S. Information Agency (particularly for "Voice in America") for a period of twenty years.Works and achievements
Grynberg published his first story in 1959, which was later included in his debut collection, "The Antigone Crew" in 1963. His works - both while in
Poland and in the United States – Grynberg narrated the stories of “those who died during the war and of those who survived to live afterwards in Lodz, Warsaw, or New York, struggling to come to terms with their own memory and with the fact that others did not remember.” His works were also described as characteristically abundant in “biographical and autobiographical material”, where his Jewish protagonists are the narrators whose personal experiences were “supplemented by the experiences of other ‘survivors’”.Grynberg was a recipient of all major Polish literary prizes. He also contributed to the Polish press and English-language journals. His essays and articles appeared in publications such as the "Commentary", the "Midstream", and the "Soviet-Jewish Affairs" in
London . Grynberg’s novels had been published in English translation, namely: "Child of the Shadows" (Vallentine Mitchell, London, 1969); the sequel, "The Victory" (Northwestern University Press, 1993) and the documentary book, "Children of Zion " (Northwestern University Press , January 1998, translated byJacqueline Mitchell ). [http://books.google.com/books?id=0T137MXvFy8C&dq=henryk+grynberg Grynberg, Henryk. Children of Zion, Book Description and Summary, Google Book Search, Books.Google.com (undated)] , retrieved on: July 28, 2007]Grynberg's books were also translated into the French, German, Italian, Hebrew and Dutch languages.
Grynberg's 2004 book "Uchodźcy" ("
Refugee s") was nominated for Poland's Nike Literary Award in 2005.References
pecific
General
* [http://www.polishwriting.net/?s=author&c=grynberg Henryk Grynberg: Biography, Extracts and Articles, Polish Writing, PolishWriting.net (undated)] , retrieved on: July 27, 2007
* [http://www.polishwriting.net/index.php?id=27 Grynberg, Henryk. "Drawing in Memory", Polish Writing, PolishWriting.net (undated)] , retrieved on: July 27, 2007
* [http://www.ce-review.org/01/1/books1_manetti1.html Manetti, Christina. Recording a Lost World: Henryk Grynberg's "Memorbuch", W A B (Warsaw), 2000] ISBN 8388221175 and [http://www.ce-review.org/01/1/books1_manetti1.html Central Europe Review, CE-Review.org, January 8, 2001] , retrieved on: July 27, 2007
* [http://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henryk_Grynberg Henryk Grynberg, Polish Wikipedia, pl.wikipedia.org, 2007] , retrieved on: July 27, 2007
* [http://www.jbooks.com/fiction/FI_AdamczykGarbowska.htm Adamczyk-Garbowska, Monika. Tales from the Guardian of the Graves, A Review of "Drohobycz, Drohobycz and Other Stories/True Tales from the Holocaust and Life After by Henryk Grynberg", translated from the Polish by Alicia Nitecki, edited by Theodosia Robertson, 275 pages, Penguin Books, The Online Jewish Books Company, Good Search, JBooks.com and JFLMedia.com, 2004] , retrieved on: July 27, 2007
* [http://books.google.com/books?id=0T137MXvFy8C&dq=henryk+grynberg&printsec=frontcover&source=web&ots=WpwQpAq1PV&sig=pec_JCakiWCNM_g-E-r7WuQ2aNs#PPA168,M1 Grynberg, Henryk. Children of Zion, Google Book Search, Books.Google.com (undated)] , retrieved on: July 27, 2007
* [http://nupress.northwestern.edu/title.cfm?ISBN=0-8101-1354-6 Grynberg, Henryk. Children of Zion, Close-Up, Northwestern University Press and Northwestern.edu (undated)] , retrieved on: July 28, 2007
* [http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Holocaust/0102_Tehran-children.html Holtzman, Ada. The Children of Zion:"The Tehran Children", JewishGen, Inc.] and [http://www.jewishgen.org/yizkor/Tehran/teh000.html The Yizkor Book Project, June 2004] , retrieved on: July 28, 2007
* [http://www.amazon.co.uk/Children-Zion-Jewish-Lives-Nonfiction/dp/0810113538 Grynberg, Henryk. Children of Zion (Synopsis), Amazon.co.uk, 2007] , retrieved on: July 28, 2007
* [http://www.jewishgen.org/yizkor/Tehran/Teh001.html Ackerfeld, Lance and Joyce Field. List of the Children (Original list of the children who arrived to Eretz Israel in the middle of World War II, after escape from occupied Poland to Russia), JewishGen, Inc., 2004] , retrieved on: July 28, 2007
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