This is the story of one woman,
Lola Lieber, a Hungarian-Polish Jewess who survived and has chosen
during her lifetime to tell the story of the ordeals of her
survival and the strength of her faith and courage against all
odds. It is also the memoir of a marriage that was a true working
partnership as well as a marital bond of extraordinary depth. With
her husband, Mechel, beside her, Lola defied authority, confronted
the devil Eichmann in person, never giving up her faith in God and
her belief that she and Mechel would be together at the end. The
title of this book comes from a comment Mechel made at a
bittersweet time in their lives. His words: "There will be a world
after this," thankfully, would turn out to be
true.
You are about to embark on a journey that begins in Hungary, in the town of Munkach, goes forward into Krynica and on into Krakow, Niepolomice, the Bochnia Ghetto, Kosice, Budapest, Debrecen, Bucharest and finally Munich. It is an adventure of harrowing events and many close calls. It is, in the end, the story of the survival of a woman who will go on in her life to help repair the lost tapestry of Jewish life and to become a mother, grandmother, great-grandmother, as well as an accomplished artist.
You are about to embark on a journey that begins in Hungary, in the town of Munkach, goes forward into Krynica and on into Krakow, Niepolomice, the Bochnia Ghetto, Kosice, Budapest, Debrecen, Bucharest and finally Munich. It is an adventure of harrowing events and many close calls. It is, in the end, the story of the survival of a woman who will go on in her life to help repair the lost tapestry of Jewish life and to become a mother, grandmother, great-grandmother, as well as an accomplished artist.