When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit Quotes
When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
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Judith Kerr24,356 ratings, 3.99 average rating, 1,847 reviews
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When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit Quotes
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“We’ll come back,” said Papa.
“I know,” said Anna... “But it won’t be the same - we won’t belong. Do you think we’ll ever really belong anywhere?”
“I suppose not,” said Papa. “Not the way people belong who have lived in one place all their lives. But we’ll belong a little in lots of places, and I think that may be just as good.”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“I know,” said Anna... “But it won’t be the same - we won’t belong. Do you think we’ll ever really belong anywhere?”
“I suppose not,” said Papa. “Not the way people belong who have lived in one place all their lives. But we’ll belong a little in lots of places, and I think that may be just as good.”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“Herhalde ünlü olabilmek için kötü bir çocukluk geçirmek gerekiyor diye düşündü Anna.”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“If you want to write about disasters, that’s what you must do. It’s no use trying to write what other people want. The only way to write anything good is to try to please yourself.”
(Page 22).”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
(Page 22).”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“I don’t really mind where we are,’ she said – ‘as long as we’re all together.”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“Suddenly the work seemed quite easy and she was beginning to enjoy writing stories and compositions in French. It was not a bit like writing in German – you could make the words do quite different things – and she found it curiously exciting.”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“It was all exactly as it had been, and yet there was something about this very sameness that made Anna and Max feel a little like strangers. How could the Zwirns’ lives have stayed so much the same when their own had become so different? “You’d think just something would have changed,” said Max, and Franz asked, “What sort of thing?” but Max did not know himself.”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“Papa,” said Anna after the first excitement of seeing him safe and sound had worn off. “Papa, I was a bit upset when I heard about the price on your head.” “So was I!” said Papa. “Very upset.” “Were you?” asked Anna, surprised. Papa had always seemed so brave. “Well, it’s such a very small price,” explained Papa. “A thousand marks goes nowhere these days. I think I’m worth a lot more, don’t you?” “Yes,” said Anna, feeling better. “No self-respecting kidnapper would touch it,” said Papa. He shook his head sadly. “I’ve a good mind to write to Hitler and complain!”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“I wonder where we’ll be on your eleventh birthday,” said Papa, “and on your twelfth.”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“For a moment she felt terribly sad about Pink Rabbit. It had had embroidered black eyes – the original glass ones had fallen out years before – and an endearing habit of collapsing on its paws. Its fur, though no longer very pink, had been soft and familiar. How could she ever have chosen to pack that characterless woolly dog in its stead? It had been a terrible mistake, and now she would never be able to put it right.”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“She tried to remember that she was a Jew and must not be frightened, otherwise the Nazis would say that all Jews were cowards - but it was no use.”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“Neden bir arada oynayamıyorlardı sanki? Bunun için de aynı partiyi mi tutmak gerekiyordu.”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“She thought of the flat in Paris and the Gasthof Zwirn. No, it was absurd. Some things had been difficult, but it had always been interesting and often funny – and she and Max and Mama and Papa had nearly always been together. As long as they were together she could never have a difficult childhood. She sighed a little as she abandoned her hopes.”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“Can you understand what they’re saying?” asked Anna. “Not a word,” said Max. “A few months and we’ll be able to,” said Anna.”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“I don’t know how we lived here for two years,” said Mama. Anna rubbed her hand over the red oilcloth on the table. “I liked it,” she said.”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“We’ll come back,” said Papa. “I know,” said Anna. She remembered how she had felt when they had gone back to the Gasthof Zwirn for the holidays and added, “But it won’t be the same – we won’t belong. Do you think we’ll ever really belong anywhere?” “I suppose not,” said Papa. “Not the way people belong who have lived in one place all their lives. But we’ll belong a little in lots of places, and I think that may be just as good.”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“There seemed to be less to pack each time they moved – so many things had been used up and thrown away – and one grey morning less than two weeks after the letter had come from England, they were ready to leave.”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“I’ve never minded being a refugee before. In fact I’ve loved it. I think the last two years, when we’ve been refugees, have been much better than if we’d stayed in Germany. But if you send us away now I’m so terribly frightened …I’m so terribly frightened …” “Of what?” asked Papa. “That I might really feel like one!” said Anna and burst into tears.”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“You have no idea – but no idea –” shouted Mama, “of the work I have to do. I get worn out washing and cooking and ironing and mending, and all you ever say is that it isn’t necessary!”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“Isn’t it lovely!” cried Anna and somehow, suddenly, she no longer minded about her birthday and her presents. It seemed rather fine and adventurous to be a refugee, to have no home and not to know where one was going to live. Perhaps at a pinch it might even count as a difficult childhood like the ones in Gunther’s book and she would end up by being famous.
(Page 67).”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
(Page 67).”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“Yes,” said Papa, “and to me it doesn’t seem so very long ago. Of course we didn’t know then that we’d be spending your tenth birthday steaming about Lake Zurich as refugees from Hitler.” “Is a refugee someone who’s had to leave their home?” asked Anna. “Someone who seeks refuge in another country,” said Papa. “I don’t think I’m quite used to being one yet,” said Anna. “It’s an odd feeling,” said Papa. “You live in a country all your life. Then suddenly it is taken over by thugs and there you are, on your own in a strange place, with nothing.” He looked so cheerful as he said this that Anna asked, “Don’t you mind?” “In a way,” said Papa. “But I find it very interesting.”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“If …if …if …” said Heimpi. “If my grandmother had wheels she’d be a bus and we could all go for a ride in her.” That was what she always said.”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“In the end there was only room for some books and one of Anna’s stuffed toys. Should she choose Pink Rabbit which had been her companion ever since she could remember, or a newly acquired woolly dog? It seemed a pity to leave the dog when she had hardly had time to play with it, and Heimpi packed it for her.”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“Well then,” she said, “if you look the same as everyone else and you don’t go to a special church, how do you know you are Jewish? How can you be sure?” There was a pause. “I suppose …” said Anna, “I suppose it’s because my mother and father are Jews, and I suppose their mothers and fathers were too. I never thought about it much until Papa started talking about it last week.” “Well, I think it’s silly!” said Elsbeth. “It’s silly about Adolf Hitler and people being Jews and everything!” She started to run and Anna followed her.”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“There are Jews scattered all over the world,’ he said, ‘and the Nazis are telling terrible lies about them. So it’s very important for people like us to prove them wrong.’ ‘How can we?’ asked Max. ‘By being better than other people,’ said Papa.”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“Monsieur Fernand...took them to a large busy restaurant where they sat at a table outside on the pavement and ordered a meal.
'Snails for the children!' cried Fernand. 'They've never tried them.'
Max stared at his portion in horror and could not bring himself to touch them. But Anna, encouraged by Francine, tried one and found that it tasted like a very delicious mushroom.”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
'Snails for the children!' cried Fernand. 'They've never tried them.'
Max stared at his portion in horror and could not bring himself to touch them. But Anna, encouraged by Francine, tried one and found that it tasted like a very delicious mushroom.”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“Daily Parisian”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“Omama finished her sentence, exactly as though Max had crystallised the thought for her. Anna and Max burst into uncontrollable laughter, but Mama said, ‘Nonsense, Mother!’ quite sharply and told Max to go and get himself cleaned up. ‘As a matter of fact the children are doing extremely well,’ she told Omama and added when Max was safely out of the room, ‘Max is working for the first time in his life.’ ‘And I’m going to take the certificat d’études!’ said Anna. This was her big news. Madame Socrate had decided, since her work had improved so much, that there was now no reason why she shouldn’t take the examination in the summer with the rest of the class. ‘The certificat d’études?’ said Omama. ‘Isn’t that some kind of elementary school examination?’ ‘It’s for French twelve-year-old children,’ said Mama, ‘and Anna’s teacher thinks it remarkable that she should have”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“would have been one of the million and a half other Jewish children who died in Nazi concentration camps. I can never forget how lucky I’ve been.”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“Especially since her success would be partly due to her talent for standing on one leg?”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
“Happy 1935!”
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
― When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit
