Shanghai Diary: A Young Girl's Journey from Hitler's Hate to War-Torn China
Ursula recounts her fate as an European Jew who fled east rather than west and south to escape the Nazis, and ended up in the streets of Shanghai, where poverty, disease, and the hard realities of life on the streets awaited her.
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By the late 1930s, Europe sat on the brink of a world war. As the holocaust approached, many Jewish families in Germany fled to one of the only open port available to them: Shanghai. Once called "the armpit of the world," Shanghai ultimately served as the last resort for tens of thousands of Jews desperate to escape Hitler's "Final Solution." Against this backdrop, 11-year-old Ursula Bacon and her family made the difficult 8,000-mile voyage to Shanghai, with its promise of safety. But instead of a storybook China, they found overcrowded streets teeming with peddlers, beggars, opium dens, and prostitutes. Amid these abysmal conditions, Ursula learned of her own resourcefulness and found within herself the fierce determination to survive.
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