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A Gateways Consciousness Classic Imprisoned in Auschwitz for two years, having eluded death by the narrowest of margins, the man known as Ka-Tzetnik 135633 survived the Holocaust to discover that survival alone would not end his torment. For 30 years, through nightly dreams of terrifying intensity, the writer remained captive to the horrors of Auschwitz. Finally in 1976 he sought help from Professor Bastiaans, the Dutch psychiatrist who first recognized Concentration Camp Syndrome and successfully treated camp survivors with a therapy involving doses of LSD. Shivitti is a memoir of that experience, and reading it may change your life. |
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144 pages - ISBN: 0-89556-113-1 For Information contact: Iven Lourie, Editor, at 530-272-0180 email us: info '@' gatewaysbooksandtapes.com Gateways Books & Tapes Gateways Home Page |
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It is a long time since I have heard a voice like this: the voice of a wounded soul whose cry is prayer. --Elie Wiesel, author and Nobel Prize laureate |
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An excerpt from the Author's Foreword: When Nike, my lifemate, heard that a psychiatrist in
Holland, Professor Bastiaans-discoverer of the Concentration
Camp Syndrome--had been healing camp survivors with a new
method of treatment incorporating LSD, she came rushing to
me with this piece of good news. |
An excerpt from the Preface to the Italian edition by Rabbi Don R. Singer: This book is the true testimony of a man who knocked on the gates of Hell in order to reenter and discover the meaning of the events he lived through many years before in Auschwitz death camp. He wrote his first testimony a few months after World War II in a transit camp in Italy still wearing his "Auschwitz shrouds." He was not expected to live. Racing death he wrote as in a trance completing the book, Salamandra, in exactly two and a half weeks. But he could not pen his own name to the manuscript. The book was written by those who had become fire in the ovens of the crematorium. He chose, for author, the name shared by all the captives: Ka-Tzetnik 135633, "Concentration Camp Inmate," and the number the Nazis tattooed on his arm. In Israel he changed his personal name to De-Nur. De-Nur means "Of the fire." |
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An excerpt from the Preface by Dr. Claudio Naranjo, M.D. We have here a little book of immense bearing, which
might well be announced in terms similar to those chosen by
a reviewer of the recent movie on the sinking of the
Titanic. Just as in his review he observed that the
moviegoer should not come to admire such things as camera
work or even plot, but to grasp the enormity of the event
that was reflected by the movie--here the reader should not
look so much for literature, psychotherapy, or history as
for the extremity of the experience of the
holocaust. |
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