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・ The Man Who Sleeps
・ The Man Who Smiled
・ The Man Who Smiles
・ The Man Who Sold Himself
・ The Man Who Sold the Moon
・ The Man Who Sold the Moon (short story collection)
・ The Man Who
・ The Man Who (play)
・ The Man Who (Thought He) Looked Like Robert Taylor
・ The Man Who Ate the Man
・ The Man Who Ate the Phoenix
・ The Man Who Awoke
・ The Man Who Bought London
・ The Man Who Bridged the Mist
・ The Man Who Broke Britain
The Man who Broke into Auschwitz
・ The Man Who Broke the Bank at Monte Carlo
・ The Man Who Broke the Bank at Monte Carlo (film)
・ The Man Who Broke the Bank at Monte Carlo (song)
・ The Man Who Called Himself Jesus
・ The Man Who Came Back
・ The Man Who Came Back (2008 film)
・ The Man Who Came Early
・ The Man Who Came to Be Dinner
・ The Man Who Came to Dinner
・ The Man Who Came to Dinner (film)
・ The Man Who Came to Port
・ The Man Who Can't Be Moved
・ The Man Who Captured Eichmann
・ The Man Who Cast Two Shadows


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The Man who Broke into Auschwitz : ウィキペディア英語版
The Man who Broke into Auschwitz

''The Man Who Broke Into Auschwitz'' is the title of an autobiographical book by Denis Avey, who is a recipient of a British Hero of the Holocaust award. The book was written together with Rob Broomby and published by Hodder in 2011.〔(Hodder & Stoughton > News and events. )〕 It carries a foreword by Sir Martin Gilbert. The novelist James Long assisted with research and helped to edit and structure the manuscript. However, since its publication, the book has become a subject of considerable controversy. The head historian at Auschwitz, Piotr Setkiewicz, who conducted his own research, which was confirmed by other historians, Auschwitz former prisoners, and Jewish organisations, came to the conclusion that at least some parts of the story seem highly unlikely and probably never happened.〔
==Book synopsis==
Denis Avey relates his wartime service and how he came to be held prisoner in E715A, a camp for Allied Prisoners of War adjacent to Auschwitz. He describes how he exchanged uniforms with a Jewish inmate of Auschwitz III in order to enter this camp to discover more about conditions there, with a view to reporting these to the authorities after the war.〔("The Man Who Broke into Auschwitz: A True Story of World War II" ), ''Publisher's Weekly'', book summary〕 He also relates how he smuggled cigarettes to another Jewish inmate Ernst Lobethal, having obtained these from Lobethal’s sister in Britain. He was convinced that Ernst had died by early 1945, because he could not have survived the death marches when the camp was evacuated. He also said that after the war the authorities were not interested in his story and he kept silence for more than half a century. Eventually he did begin to disclose his story and it came to the attention of the BBC. Rob Broomby was able to trace Lobethal’s sister Susanne and her son had a copy of a video recording which her brother before his death had made for the USC Shoah Foundation Institute for Visual History and Education in which he describes how a British POW known as 'Ginger' smuggled the cigarettes to him and how these saved his life by enabling him to exchange them for food and to have new soles put on his boots which enabled him to survive the death march.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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