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When Angels Wept -- Jan S. Prybyla

 
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When Angels Wept: The Rebirth and Dismemberment of Poland and Her People in the Early Decades of the Twentieth Century

Jan S. Prybyla

Paperback, 6x9 in, 240 pages
Wheatmark, March 2010
ISBN: 9781604943252

Description

Jan and Marta Przybyła were two ordinary people who perished in the hell of Auschwitz. They died because they were Polish and loyal to their country--a capital crime in the eyes of their killers.

Maria Przybyła put her own life in peril in an attempt to save her parents from unspeakable agony at the hands of Nazi barbarians, and to prevent her brother from suffering the same fate.

Written by Jan Przybyla’s nephew, When Angels Wept is a record of people and events long past, but not forgotten. It recounts the story of an individual family caught in the brutal insanity of the Nazi occupation, and the destruction of the Polish state by Germany’s war machine.

About the Author

Jan S. Prybyla, PhD is professor emeritus of economics at Pennsylvania State University, former president of the Conference on European Problems, and adjunct faculty member of the Foreign Service Institute at the U.S. Department of State.

He has authored and coauthored numerous books on comparative political economy, among them Market and Plan Under Socialism: The Bird in the Cage and The American Way of Peace: An Interpretation.