

An edition of The last escape (1973)
By Ruth Aliav,Peggy Mann
Publish Date
September 1, 1975
Publisher
Coronet Books
Language
eng
Pages
518
Description:
Most of us think of the Mossad as the Israeli equivalent to America's CIA. That is correct today (2017), but in the late 1930s, the Mossad was made up of nine men and one woman--Ruth Kluger. Their purpose was to spirit Europe's Jews into, as they called it, "Eretz Israel", the "Land of Israel". Since Great Britain had severely restricted legal Jewish immigration to Palestine (the "Aliyah Aleph"), the Mossad smuggled Jews into Palestine (the "Aliyah Beth"). Ruth tells her story from the time she was recruited into the Mossad through the end of World War II and the establishment of the State of Israel. The book is much more interesting than this synopsis, believe me. And Ruth Kluger-Aliav (she changed her name when she emigrated to Israel) is not to be confused with Ruth Kluger, a professor emerita of German studies at the University of California, Irvine. Dr. Kluger (b. 1931) was deported from Vienna and spent time in concentration camps as a child; her book *Still Alive* tells of those experiences.
subjects: Emigration and immigration, Jews, Persecutions, Rescue, World War, 1939-1945, Jewish Personal narratives, Personal narratives, Jewish, Aliav, ruth, 1914-1980, World war, 1939-1945, jews, Palestine, emigration and immigration, Jews, persecutions, World war, 1939-1945, personal narratives, jewish
People: Ruth Aliav (1914-1980), Ruth Klüger (1914-1980), $10.0010 Ruth Aliav (1914-1980)
Places: Palestine, Romania, Europe, Istanbul
Times: Pre-World War II. The Aliyah Beth, i.e. the illegal emigration of European Jews to Eretz Israel ("Land of Israel") to escape the persecutions they saw coming.