City of Belmont - Ruth Faulkner Public Library

The ghost tattoo, discovering the hidden truth of my father's Holocaust, Tony Bernard

Label
The ghost tattoo, discovering the hidden truth of my father's Holocaust, Tony Bernard
Language
eng
resource.biographical
individual biography
Illustrations
illustrationsmapsgenealogical tablesportraits
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The ghost tattoo
Responsibility statement
Tony Bernard
Sub title
discovering the hidden truth of my father's Holocaust
Summary
To the outside world, Henry Bernard was a hard-working and beloved family doctor on Sydney's Northern Beaches. Yet he was also a Holocaust survivor whose life was profoundly affected by the experiences of his past. He took extreme steps for his family's security, keeping a rifle in his bedroom and covering up his family's Jewish origin. He was obsessed with paying off debt - the German word for debt being the same as the word for 'guilt'. He kept his striped Auschwitz uniform by his bed along with a picture of his mother. These obsessions destroyed his marriage and restricted any hope he had of conventional domestic happiness. But Henry had a bigger secret and a deeper shame about what he had done during the war. He suffered privately until he began returning to Germany and Poland to confront his past and come to terms with the deaths of his parents and of Halina, the love of his life. The Ghost Tattoo is the story of how Tony Bernard, Henry's eldest son, went on a forty-year journey with his father to solve the mystery of why Henry was the way he was, and how he finally came to understand the desperate choices Henry had made in the ghetto to try to keep himself and his family alive. About the Author: Tony Bernard is an accident and emergency doctor at the Northern Beaches Hospital in Sydney. He followed his father Henry into the medical profession. Henry was his hero. Yet it was one thing to idolise his father, and another to understand who he was and what he had gone through. Shortly before Henry's death in 2016, Tony recorded his father's memoirs and collaborated with the Jewish museum in Sydney to produce a document for the Bernard family. But it uncovered new details of an extraordinary holocaust survival story
Target audience
adult
Classification

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