"I so much would like to live among a people that does not fear or suppress the truth, a nation that admits to its past mistakes. I would so much like to live in a nation where somebody who thinks 'against the stream' can be an adversary but not necessarily the enemy. I would like to live amongst people who can take criticism, amongst people who will try to right their wrongs instead of trying to hide them."
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Against the Stream
Growing Up Where Hitler Used to Live
Anna Elisabeth Rosmus
Translated from the German by Imogen von Tannenberg
As a teenager in Passau, Germany, Anna Elisabeth Rosmus promised herself: "Never again will you be silent if something has to be said. You will open your mouth and protest whenever and wherever you find injustice." She kept this vow in mind as she embarked on a life-changing journey to discover the truth about her hometown's buried pastand she has kept it to this day. Born in 1960 to a middle-class Catholic family in the small city of Passau, Rosmus came to see that her formal education provided little information about the history of Nazi activity in Passau, or in Germany as a whole.
As she slowly uncovered the "forgotten" history of Passaufor a national essay competition titled "The Prewar Years in My Hometown"Rosmus came face to face with startling evidence that common "middle-class" Catholic Passauers had committed many violent anti-Semitic crimes. After overcoming a stubborn bureaucracy that blocked her every attempt to access archives, files, and photographs to document prewar Passau, Rosmus's essay turned into her first book. At the age of twenty-four, she won Germany's prestigious Geschwister-Scholl Award for Resistance and Persecution in Passau from 1933 to 1939 which outlines the town's history during the Nazi era. Though celebrated on many fronts for her civil courage, Rosmus faced a storm of opposition in Passau and was subsequently shunned.
Against the Stream tells the story of a committed young woman who overcame fierce resistance to discover and make public the suppressed deeds of her fellow citizens. First published as part of Germany's acclaimed "What I Think" series, this memoir chronicles the intense backlash Rosmus faced in the form of censorship, lawsuits, and death threats. Rosmus's story, which inspired the 1990 Academy Award-nominated film The Nasty Girl, also follows her attempts to bring home Passau's expelled Jews and few Holocaust survivors, and to commemorate the forgotten Jews of Passau. Her story recounts her dedication to uncovering anti-Semitism and to fighting neo-Nazis and Germany's extreme right.
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