The Zookeeper's Wife Quotes

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The Zookeeper's Wife: A War Story The Zookeeper's Wife: A War Story by Diane Ackerman
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“I watched her face switch among the radio stations of memory”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife
“I don't understand all the fuss. If any creature is in danger, you save it, human or animal.”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife: A War Story
“Why was it, she asked herself, that 'animals can sometimes subdue their predatory ways in only a few months, while humans, despite centuries of refinement, can quickly grow more savage than any beast.”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife
“...he'd know about the role of mirror neurons in the brain, special cells in the premotor cortex that fire right before a person reaches for a rock, steps forward, turns away, begins to smile.Amazingly, the same neurons fire whether we do something or watch someone else do the same thing, and both summon similar feelings. Learning form our own mishaps isn't as safe as learning from someone else's, which helps us decipher the world of intentions, making our social whirl possible. The brain evolved clever ways to spy or eavesdrop on risk, to fathom another's joy or pain quickly, as detailed sensations, without resorting to words. We feel what we see, we experience others as self.”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife
“God may promise not to destroy creation, but it is not a promise humankind made - to our peril.”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife
“For if I do something, I never do it thoughtlessly.”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife
“Germany's crime is the greatest crime the world has ever known, because it is not on the scale of History: it is on the scale of Evolution.”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife
“All our senses feed the brain, and if it diets mainly on cruelty and suffering, how can it remain healthy? Change that diet, on purpose, train mentally to refocus the mind, and one nourishes the brain.”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife: A War Story
“How do you retain a spirit of affection and humor in a crazed, homicidal, unpredictable society?”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife
“A good strategy should dictate the right actions. Any action mustn't be impulsive, but analyzed along with all its possible outcomes. A solid plan always includes many backups and alternatives.”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife
“Suffering took hold of me like a magic spell abolishing all differences between friends and strangers.”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife
“Antonina felt convinced that people needed to connect more with their animal nature, but also that animals long for human company, reach out for human attention.”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife
“The idea of safety had shrunk into particles - one snug moment, then the next. Meanwhile, the brain piped fugues of worry and staged mind-theaters full of tragedies and triumphs, because unfortunately, the fear of death does wonders to focus the mind, inspire creativity, and heightens the senses. Trusting one's hunches only seems gamble if one has time for seem; otherwise the brain goes on autopilot and trades the elite craft of analysis for the best rapid insights that float up from its danger files and ancient bag of tricks.”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife
“It's not enough to do research from a distance. It's by living beside animals that you learn their behavior and psychology.”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife
“As fleeting emotions stalk it, a face can leak fear or the guilt of a forming lie.”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife
“Every moment is great, we were taught, every moment s unique.”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife: A War Story
“The beauty and genius of a work of art may be reconceived, though its first material expression be destroyed; a vanished harmony may yet again inspire the composer; but when the last individual of a race of living things breathes no more, another heaven and another earth must pass before such a one can be again.”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife
“Although Mengele's subjects could be operated on without any painkillers at all, a remarkable example of Nazi zoophilia is that a leading biologist was once punished for not giving worms enough anesthesia during an experiment.”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife
“She's so sensitive, she's almost able to read their minds. . .. She becomes them. . .. She has a precise and very special gift, a way of observing and understanding animals that's rare, a sixth sense. . .. It's been this way since she was little." In”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife
“All our senses feed the brain, and if it diets mainly on cruelty and suffering, how can it remain healthy? Change that diet, on purpose, train mentally to refocus the mind, and one nourishes the brain. Rabbi”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife
“The Lutz heck that emerges from his writings and actions drifted like a weather vane: charming when need be, cold-blooded when need be, tigerish or endearing, depending on his goal. Still, it is surprising that Heck the zoologist chose to ignore the accepted theory of hybrid vigor: that interbreeding strengthens a bloodline. He must have known that mongrels enjoy better immune systems and have more tricks up their genetic sleeves, while in a closely knit species, however "perfect," any illness that kills one animal threatens to wipe out all the others, which is why zoos keep careful studbooks of endangered animals such as cheetahs and forest bison and try to mate them advantageously. In any case, in the distant past, long before anyone was recognizably Aryan, our ancestors shared the world with other flavors of hominids, and interbreeding among neighbors often took place, producing hardier, nastier offspring who thrived. All present-day humans descend from that robust, talkative mix, specifically from a genetic bottleneck of only about one hundred individuals. A 2006 study of mitochondrial DNA tracks Ashkenazi Jews (about 92 percent of the world’s Jews in 1931) back to four women, who migrated from the Near East to Italy in the second and third centuries. All of humanity can be traced back to the gene pool of one person, some say to a man, some a woman. It’s hard to imagine our fate being as iffy as that, be we are natural wonders.”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife
“The Germans have removed, murdered or burned alive tens of thousands of Jews. Out of the three million Polsih Jews, no more than 10 percent remain.”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife
“Every day our life was full of thoughts of the horrible present, and even our own death.”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife
“Shapira's Hasidism included transcendent meditation, training the imagination and channeling the emotions to achieve mystical visions. The ideal way, Shapira taught, was to "witness one's thoughts to correct negative habits and character traits." A thought observed will start to weaken, especially negative thoughts, which he advised students not to enter into but examine dispassionately. If they sat on the bank watching their stream of thoughts flow by, without being swept away by them, they might achieve a form of meditation called hashkatah: silencing the conscious mind.”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife
“We did it because it was the right thing to do.”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife
“The search of reason ends at the shore of the known,”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife
“The Underground Peasant Movement adopted the slogan of "As little, as late, and as bad as possible," and set about sabotaging deliveries to Germans and diverting supplies to people in the cities,”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife
“But, without meaning to exactly, one still tends to conjure up scary scenarios, their pathos or salvation, as if one could endure a trauma before it occurred, in small manageable doses, as a sort of inoculation. Are there homeopathic degrees of anguish?”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife: A War Story
“Man is a messenger who forgot the message”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife
“One of the most remarkable things about Antonina was her determination to include play, animals, wonder, curiosity, marvel, and a wide blaze of innocence in a household where all dodged the ambient dangers, horrors, and uncertainties. That takes a special stripe of bravery rarely valued in wartime. While”
Diane Ackerman, The Zookeeper's Wife

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