- product-details.type.audio
 - 2020
 - 23 h 58 min
 - XPUB GmbH
 - (Auto-)Biography
 
product-details.no-smartlinks-label
product-details.title-label
Blind Faith
product-details.description-label
Salomea Genin was born in 1932 in Berlin to Polish-Jewish parents and fled the Nazis with her family to Australia in 1939. In 1944 she joined the Eureka Youth (Young Communist) League and in 1949 – the beginning of the Cold War – the Australian Communist Party just as the government was planning to ban it.
In 1951, as a delegate to the "3rd World Youth Festival" in East Berlin, she wanted to help build an anti-fascist state in the newly-founded German Democratic Republic (East Germany). In 1963, after a nine-year struggle, they finally allowed her in. Twenty years later, she realized that she was living in a police state, one in which she had willingly participated – and became suicidal. By 1985, psychotherapy and writing a book about her family enabled her to find the strength to go into political opposition and build a new life, even before the Berlin Wall and East Germany itself were dismantled in 1989.
product-details.on-public-lists-label
product-details.on-public-lists-fallback-text 
product-details.meta-data-label
product-details.publisher-label:
product-details.author-label:
product-details.title-label:
Blind Faith
product-details.read-by-label:
product-details.fabely-genre-label:
product-details.language-label:
EN
product-details.isbn-audio-label:
9783945703410
product-details.publication-date-label:
18 de fevereiro de 2020
product-details.keywords-label: 
product-details.duration-label
23 h 58 min
product-details.product-type-label
AUDIO
product-details.explicit-label:
product-details.no-label
product-details.radioplay-label:
product-details.no-label
product-details.unabridged-label:
product-details.yes-label
product-details.about-author:
Salomea Genin was born in 1932 in Berlin to Polish-Jewish parents and fled the Nazis with her family to Australia in 1939. In 1944 she joined the Eureka Youth (Young Communist) League and in 1949 – the beginning of the Cold War – the Australian Communist Party just as the government was planning to ban it.
In 1951, as a delegate to the "3rd World Youth Festival" in East Berlin, she wanted to help build an anti-fascist state in the newly-founded German Democratic Republic (East Germany). In 1963, after a nine-year struggle, they finally allowed her in. Twenty years later, she realized that she was living in a police state, one in which she had willingly participated – and became suicidal. By 1985, psychotherapy and writing a book about her family enabled her to find the strength to go into political opposition and build a new life, even before the Berlin Wall and East Germany itself were dismantled in 1989.