Alicia Appleman-Jurman

Alicia Appleman-Jurman (May 9, 1930 – April 8, 2017),[2] also known as Alicia Ada Appleman, was a Polish-born IsraeliAmerican memoirist, born in Rosulna, Poland (present-day Rosilna, Ukraine), who has written and spoken about her experiences of the Holocaust in her autobiography, Alicia: My Story.

Alicia Ada Appleman
BornAlicia Jurman[1]
(1930-05-09)May 9, 1930
Rosulna, Poland
DiedApril 8, 2017(2017-04-08) (aged 86)
San Jose, California
Resting placeOak Hill Memorial Park, San Jose, California
OccupationHolocaust spokesperson, writer, activist
NationalityAmerican, Israeli
CitizenshipAmerican
SubjectsThe Holocaust
SpouseGabriel Appleman
ChildrenDan Appleman, Roan Bear, Zachary Appleman

Early life

The sole female and the second-youngest child of Sigmund and Frieda Jurman in a family of five children, Alicia Jurman was raised from the age of five in Buczacz. Her parents and four brothers (Moshe, Bunio, Herzl and Zachary) were all murdered during the Holocaust.

She escaped the Germans by being thrown through the window of a train taking her family to an extermination camp. After Germany's defeat, she joined the underground group Bricha, helping smuggle Jews out of Poland to Austria, then on to the Palestine Mandate, which would become Israel. In early 1947 she sailed aboard the Theodor Herzl, which was stopped by the Britain's Royal Navy. The ship's crew and passengers were sent to Cyprus and interned for eight months there. In December 1947, Jurman made it to the Palestine Mandate.

She was part of the Palyam, later serving in the “Chayl HaYam” naval forces that fought at Jaffa. There she met Gabriel Appleman, a volunteer from the United States. They wed in 1950 and came to the United States two years later. They returned to Israel in 1969 and were there during the Yom Kippur War (1973), and returned to the U.S. in 1975. The couple had two sons, and a daughter.[1]

Death

On April 4, 2017, Appleman-Jurman went into hospice after a failed surgery to repair a leaking mitral valve. She was surrounded by family and friends as she passed on in the early morning of April 8, 2017.

Alicia: My Story

Her autobiography, Alicia: My Story, was published in Toronto and New York by Bantam in 1988. According to WorldCat, the book is held in 1176 libraries.[3] It has been translated into French (Alicia: l'histoire de ma vie); into German (Alicia: Überleben, um Zeugnis zu geben); into Danish (Alicia: min historie); into Swedish (Alicia: min historia), into Dutch (Vergeten kan ik niet), and into Spanish (Alicia, la historia de mi vida).

Other writing

  • Alicia: My Story Continues: a Journey in Historical Photographs, San Jose, CA: Desaware Publishing, 2013; ISBN 1936754096/ISBN 978-1936754090
  • Six Cherry Blossoms and other stories, Desaware Publishing (2012); ISBN 1936754010/ISBN 9781936754014 (includes incidents that occurred both before and after the events in Alicia: My Story)[4]

Filmography

Alicia Live: A Presentation by Alicia Appleman-Jurman (April 10, 2012).[5]

gollark: And more bizarre artificial segmentation with overclocking and RAM speeds.
gollark: Well, obviously no security is perfect, but it's also obviously better to not have flaws in your very CPU.
gollark: You just *don't care* about unpatchable hardware security flaws?!
gollark: They are vulnerable to many side channel attacks which AMD CPUs are not.
gollark: Intel stuff performs worse and has various vulnerabilities so it seems worse in basically every way.

References

  1. Profile of Alicia Appleman-Jurman Archived 2014-08-26 at the Wayback Machine, annefrankwall.org; accessed September 8, 2014.
  2. Alicia Appleman-Jurman official webpage, aliciamystory.com; accessed April 20, 2017.
  3. WorldCat book entry; accessed September 8, 2014.
  4. Alicia, Appleman-Jurman. Alicia: my story (Turtleback School & Library Binding ed.). Bantam Books. ISBN 9780833554192. OCLC 876621396.
  5. "Alicia Live – A Presentation by Alicia Appleman-Jurman « Alicia: My Story". aliciamystory.com. Retrieved 2017-04-20.
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