by
Aharon Golub
with
Bennett W. Golub

Aharon Golub is the kaddishel for his family – the only
son upon whose shoulders falls the responsibility to recite the
prayer for the dead, the Kaddish, for his parents. And as the
kaddishel, he honors his parents by remembering both the joys
of his early childhood in Ludvipol and the hatred that sought
to destroy Ludvipol, and his childhood. Aharon bears the burden
of an entire generation of children who made promises to their
parents, promises that are relived at every Yahrzeit, every anniversary
of the death of their parents: never to bask in the luxury
of forgetting.
So Aharon Golub remembers his past.
As a child in Hitler's War, he suffers crippling frostbite that
leaves him at the mercy of others. He encounters Jews who help
him hide, and Jews who abandon him in his time of need. He meets
non-Jews who risk their lives to feed him, and non-Jews who live
for the day they will find him and kill him.
As a kibbutznik in Israel, Aharon begins his childhood anew. He
relearns friendship, trust, love. He discovers that building a
country is a lot like building a life: It takes patience, hard
work, and an ability to put the past aside in a compartment marked
"To Open – Later."
And, as an American, Aharon begins to pry open the rusted lock
of his memories. Then, slowly, over time, he takes his own son,
Ben, his kaddishel, on a journey that is too unbelievable, too
strange, too terrifying to be true.
But it is.
"Aharon Golub's Kaddishel
is a moving depiction of the world before the Holocaust, his experience
throughout the long ordeal and the reconstitution of his life
in its aftermath. A passion for Israel -- the State and the Jewish
people -- permeates this work as does the lasting impact of the
love of land and language that was imparted to him in the Tarbut
School of his town in Ludvipol. He has borne witness in exemplary
fashion and all who read this work will be touched." Michael Berenbaum,
Director, Sigi Ziering Institute and Professor of Theology, The
University of Judaism Los Angeles, California
Bennett W. Golub is a co-founder
of a leading investment and risk management firm based in New
York.
Bennett and his wife, Cynthia, are actively involved in Jewish
philanthropy, particularly for the UJA/Federation of New York
and the Solomon Schechter School of Westchester. They live in
Mamaroneck, NY with their three children, Alexandra, Phillip,
and Jill.
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