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The Happiest Man on Earth

The Happiest Man on Earth 4

The Beautiful Life of an Auschwitz Survivor

by Eddie Jaku
Hardback
Publication Date: 28/07/2020
5/5 Rating 4 Reviews

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Life can be beautiful if you make it beautiful. It is up to you.

Eddie Jaku always considered himself a German first, a Jew second. He was proud of his country. But all of that changed in November 1938, when he was beaten, arrested and taken to a concentration camp.

Over the next seven years, Eddie faced unimaginable horrors every day, first in Buchenwald, then in Auschwitz, then on a Nazi death march. He lost family, friends, his country.

Because he survived, Eddie made the vow to smile every day. He pays tribute to those who were lost by telling his story, sharing his wisdom and living his best possible life. He now believes he is the 'happiest man on earth'.

Published as Eddie turns 100, this is a powerful, heartbreaking and ultimately hopeful memoir of how happiness can be found even in the darkest of times.

ISBN:
9781760980085
9781760980085
Category:
Autobiography: historical
Format:
Hardback
Publication Date:
28-07-2020
Language:
English
Publisher:
Pan Macmillan Australia Pty, Limited
Country of origin:
Australia
Pages:
200
Dimensions (mm):
216x144x22mm
Weight:
0.34kg
Eddie Jaku

Eddie Jaku OAM, was born Abraham Jakubowicz in Germany in 1920. In World War 2, Eddie was imprisoned in Buchenwald and Auschwitz concentration camps

In 1945, he was sent on a 'death march' but escaped. Finally, he was rescued by Allied soldiers. In 1950 he moved with family to Australia where he has lived since.

Eddie has volunteered at the Sydney Jewish Museum since its inception in 1992. Edie has been married to Flore for 74 years. They have two sons, grandchildren and great grandchildren. In 2020 Eddie celebrates his 100th birthday.

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Reviews

4.75

Based on 4 reviews

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4 Reviews

“I never lost sight of what it is to be civilised. I knew that there would be no point surviving if I had to become an evil man to do it.”

The Happiest Man On Earth is a memoir by Australian Auschwitz survivor, Eddie Jaku, born Abraham Salomon Jakubowicz in Leipzig in 1920. An idyllic childhood cradled within a loving family abruptly comes to an end in 1933 when the Nazi Party begins imposing restrictions of the freedom of Jews. His father, Isidore, insists that his son gets a good education, so Eddie becomes gentile German orphan Walter Schleif for five years until, at eighteen, he graduates as a Precision Engineer.

He has found being separated from his family heartbreaking, so returns to Leipzig for a surprise visit only to be beaten and sent to Buchenwald. He is stunned at the change in attitude of ordinary Germans: friends and neighbours who are suddenly manipulated into hatred. Those meting out unbelievable cruelty in the camp, he understands, have lost any morals, human decency or respect they had. But it’s the first occasion, of several, that his father’s insistence on a good education turns out to save his life.

A temporary escape to Belgium allows him to live with his family until they are all arrested. After a year in Exarde refugee camp in Belgium, not because he is a Jew, but because he is German, he has encountered many refugees from Hitler’s Germany, among them, former high-ranking German politicians opposing the Nazi Party. He finds Socialist Democrat Artur Bratu calm and inspiring, with an inextinguishable hope for the future of his country: worth following, Eddie decides, a survivor.

Before he makes it to Australia, there are encounters with the best and worst of mankind; there’s a failed evacuation from Dunkirk; an arrest in France as a German spy; seven months in a French camp; an escape from a train heading to Auschwitz; a reunion with his family in occupied Belgium, and a hidden stay in a cramped attic that he counts among the best times of his life; internment in Auschwitz, where often only the company of his friend Kurt kept him from giving up all hope.

“Kurt was the only link to my old life and a time when I was happy. I must tell you, there was nothing more important than my friendship with Kurt. Without him, I would have succumbed to despair after my parents were murdered.”

Forced marches, transport on open train carriages in the snow, and finally, weighing only 28kg, he is picked up by Americans and taken to hospital. What Eddie endured would have turned many people bitter, but this resourceful and resilient man eventually realises that the best revenge on those who tortured him is to live well. And after many years, he realises he needs to share what happened so that others would know. His survival and attitude to life are inspirational.

Recommended
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“This is the most important thing I have ever learned: the greatest thing you will ever do is be loved by another person.”

No matter how many books I read by Holocaust survivors, I always manage to encounter horrors I’ve never heard of before and marvel anew at the capacity humans have to survive the unimaginable. In his first sentence Eddie Jaku introduces himself as your new friend and I found that so endearing. It got me immediately invested in his story and I would have thought it was a clever way to grab you emotionally from the get to if I didn’t believe he meant it wholeheartedly. But I did believe him.

Intermittently addressing you, his friend, throughout the book, Eddie tells you his story. From his school days to his experiences in multiple concentration camps and beyond, you can’t help but feel you’re sitting across from him as he regales you with his stories and the wisdom he’s accumulated along the way.

“Kindness is the greatest wealth of all.”

Despite taking you on a journey through the darkest humanity has to offer, Eddie has managed to hold onto hope.

“There are always miracles in the world, even when all seems hopeless. And when there are no miracles, you can make them happen. With a simple act of kindness, you can save another person from despair, and that might just save their life. And this is the greatest miracle of all.”

This is a quick read, one that is undeniably heartbreaking at times. I felt like Eddie was probably holding back on describing some of the more difficult aspects of his story, but fair enough. I can’t even begin to imagine how painful it was for him to write about any of his early life.

Ultimately, my experience of this book was one where I felt better after reading it than I felt before I began. I made a new friend, albeit one I’ll probably never meet. I was reminded that it is possible to be happy and live a fulfilled life, even when you’ve experienced pain that feels insurmountable. I was encouraged to inject some more kindness into the world.

“It is never too late to be kind, polite, and a loving human being.”

My only quibble, and this is simply because Eddie made me care deeply about them, is that I yearn to know what happened to Henni after she moved to Australia and to Kurt. I adored reading about Eddie and Kurt’s friendship and to leave Kurt’s story in 1946, without any information about their (I hope) continued friendship, hurt a little.

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I loved this book. What an amazing man to have so much love and compassion after all he and his family have been through. Truly a fantastic book

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