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Author | Jane Yolen |
---|---|
Language | English |
Genre | Historical, Novel |
Publisher | Viking Books |
Publication date | October 1988 |
Media type | Print (Hardback & Paperback) |
Pages | 170 p. (hardback edition) |
ISBN | ISBN 0670810274 (hardback edition) Parameter error in {{ISBNT}}: invalid character |
The Devil's Arithmetic is a novel written by Jane Yolen in 1988. It tells the story of a Jewish girl, Hannah.
Plot introduction
Hannah is tired of remembering the horrors of the Holocaust and Passover. She is living in present time in the United States who at her family's Passover Seder is transferred to Poland during the height of the Nazi occupation in 1942 where she becomes Chaya.
Plot summary
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Young Hannah Stern, 13, was tired of remembering. Especially of her grandfather's constant bursts of rage at any comment about the Holocaust because he was a survivor himself with his sister. When Hannah is celebrating the Jewish Passover at her grandparents house, she was chosen to do the symbolic welcoming of Prophet Elijah and opened the apartment door. In an instant she was transferred back to Poland 1942 as Chaya Abramowicz, a 13-year-old teenager living in a small village with her aunt Gitl and Gitl's brother Shmuel. When the Nazi came to their village to arrest Jews, having learned about the Holocaust, Hannah tried to warn other villagers to flee and fight without success. They were taken to the concentration camp. There she met her young great aunt. They became friends, Hannah as Chaya and her aunt. Hannah had to experience and endure all the torture life until one day she was "selected". As she opened the door of death, she was transferred back to her New York grandparents' house. Now Hannah will never forget because she understood, at last she understood.
Characters in "The Devil's Arithmetic"
Present
- Hannah Stern – the main protagonist
- Aaron Stern – (Hannah's brother) (Ron-Ron)
- Aunt Eva – (Hannah's great-aunt, known as Rivka when she was a child in Poland)
- Grandpa Will – (Hannah's Grandfather was know as Wolfe when he was a child in Poland), he is Aunt Eva's Brother.
1942, Poland
- Chaya Abramowicz –
- Gitl Abramowicz – (Chaya's aunt)
- Shmuel Abramowicz – (Chaya's Uncle, Gitl's brother)
- Fayge – (Shmuel's fiancee)
- Rivka – (Chaya's friend from the concentration camp, changes name to Eva when she comes to the United States after the war)
• This novel begins with Hannah, the main character, in modern times. • She is at a Passover Seder with her family. • She is apathetic toward her grandfather's stories. • His stories reflect time spent in a concentration camp. • Hannah also is “tired of remembering” • Hannah does not like Passover, nor the Seder, so she is very bitter. • Hannah is picked to open the door to symbolically welcome in Elijah • When she does this, she is whisked away to a rural village in Poland during WWII. • The little village is called a shtetl. • A shtetl is a small Jewish town in Eastern Europe. • She tries desperately to explain that she is not Chaya, but Hannah, from modern day times. • Chaya is now living with a new aunt and new uncle • Their names are Aunt Gitl and Uncle Shmuel • After unsuccessfully trying to convince her new “family”, she gives up and accepts that she is now Chaya. • Chaya is a Jewish peasant girl. • Chaya has recently been extremely ill, near death. • She used to live in another city, with her parents. • The disease that had Chaya so sick, took her parents life, ending her up in the new family. • Chaya’s new Uncle is getting married to a girl named Fayge. • On their way to the shtetl where the marriage will be, Chaya realizes what year it is. • She realizes she is in the year 1942 and about to be taken to a concentration camp. • Chaya and her new family are dragged off to Auschwitz. • They endure a 4-day trip on trains to the concentration camp. • They are given no food, water, or bathroom breaks. • Many people died, and many got extremely sick. • Above the gate to Auschwitz, it reads, “Arbeit Mach Freit.” • This means, “Work makes you free.” • As if that were true in the time of the holocaust for German Jews • While at the camp, Chaya makes a good friend named Rivka. • Rivka helps her survive by giving her tips. • Chaya and her family attempt to escape, but are caught. • Chaya and her aunt are safe, but the others were shot. • After many hardships, Rivka is “Chosen” • Being “Chosen” means that you are getting sent to the gas chambers. • Chaya takes Rivka's banadana, and tells her to run. • Chaya has just exchanged Rivka life, for her own. • Chaya is now sent to the gas chambers, where she is murdered. • In the next millisecond, Hannah finds herself back at home. • She is standing right where she was when she was put into her terror. • Hannah is relieved to be back with her family. • She is, however, very curious about her rendevous. • Hannah discovers that she is related to her friend from Auschwitz. • Hanna finds out that she ended up giving her life for her Aunt. • Hannah is now willing to remember. • She now knows the pain that her grandfather feels. • It is a happy ending, describing an unhappy event.
Main themes
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Awards and nominations
It received the National Jewish Book Award.
Film, TV or theatrical adaptations
It was made into a TV movie starring Kirsten Dunst and Brittany Murphy in 1999.
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