![]() ![]() ![]() "Out of Samorin's more than five hundred Jewis citizens, only thirty-six returned, mostly young men and women. But a few are ethical enough to return and restore. And it doesn't mean that the family's possessions are returned from the neighbors who took them for safekeeping at the beginning of the war. This doesn't mean that every neighbor is this nice. They give what they can, do what they can to make the Friedmann's home habitable again. But most of their closest neighbors are helpful. The neighbors are shocked, extremely shocked to see them again. ![]() Stripped of furniture, yes, but still standing. Unlike some of the other returning Jews, they did find their home relatively intact. (Though each book can and does stand alone just fine.) The book opens with Elli Friedmann and her mother and brother returning to their home town of Samorin after they were liberated by the Russian soldiers. It is the middle book in a trilogy of the author's memoirs. My Bridges of Hope is the sequel to I Have Lived A Thousand Years. ![]()
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