“A good spirit helps generate a good fortune.”
I have always been interested in my past. Where did I come from? I, as I’m sure many of you have a list of names that trace my roots back generations. These, however, are just names and maybe when they were born, christened, married, and eventually died. These facts say little if nothing about who they were. What did they do, and what did they think and believe? The humanization of these ancestors is sorely lacking. To see and experience the mundane and frenetic activities of your early ancestors would give you another perspective of your own life and existence.
Charlotte Urban, nee Liselotte Goldberger, was born in Vienna in 1919 of middle-class Jewish parents. Neither one of the parents, or indeed their parents was particularly religious but did follow many of the customs. Her father served, as millions of others, served in the Great War and thankfully came home, relatively unscathed when Charlotte was born. The aftermath of the war, great depression and the political turmoil in an increasingly volatile Germany, were all part of her early life.
This is a true story. Years later the author, Leon Berger, was blessed with the friendship and trust of a remarkable woman; with an even more remarkable story. In this book, he has humanized her story and given a personal glance into the past. I found myself not only liking but loving most of the characters. Although from another generation, I could empathize and well sympathize with her and all of those close to her. You are not what you think, or what you believe. You are not what you do or where you live. You are a product of your ancestors and in many ways, they influence what you now are; even if you have no idea who they were. This is a saga spanning three generations through a century of political and economical turmoil, religious and social upheaval, and personal and family grief. Everyone met and with every goodbye, the people add and form a part of everyone they touch. I really liked this glimpse into the lives of since hitherto strangers that I now regard as friends. The vagaries of their lives are sure to interest many readers,