The Tower of Life: How Yaffa Eliach Rebuilt Her Town in Stories and Photographs

by Chana Stiefel (Author) Susan Gal (Illustrator)

The Tower of Life: How Yaffa Eliach Rebuilt Her Town in Stories and Photographs
Reading Level: 4th − 5th Grade

A moving biography of the woman who created The Tower of Life, a powerful exhibit at the US Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, DC.

★ ". . . There are many picture books about the Holocaust, but this one stands out with Gal's beautiful watercolor pictures and the true account of one woman's goal that her community never be forgotten. A beautiful tribute....Highly recommended." -- School Library Journal, starred review

★ "A stunning tale . . . bursting with detail and life . . . A magnificent and moving tribute to a loving community and an extraordinary woman." -- Booklist, starred review

". . . A loving testament to light and hope and the vision of a remarkable woman." -- Kirkus Reviews

". . . the book's message is consistently optimistic . . . Stiefel paints a truthful portrait appropriate for those just beginning to learn about the Holocaust . . . Gal's artwork . . . is dramatic and accessible . . . a book that ensures [Eliach and her town] will not be forgotten." -- Jewish Book Council

There once was a girl named Yaffa. She loved her family, her home, and her beautiful Polish town that brimmed with light and laughter. She also loved helping her Grandma Alte in her photography studio. There, shopkeepers, brides, babies, and bar mitzvah boys posed while Grandma Alte captured their most joyous moments on film. And before the Jewish New Year, they sent their precious photographs to relatives overseas with wishes for good health and happiness.

But one dark day, Nazi soldiers invaded the town. Nearly 3,500 Jewish souls -- including family, friends, and neighbors of Yaffa -- were erased.

This is the stunning true story of how Yaffa made it her life's mission to recover thousands of her town's photographs from around the world. Using these photos, she built her amazing TOWER OF LIFE, a permanent exhibit in the US Holocaust Memorial Museum, to restore the soaring spirit of Eishyshok.

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School Library Journal

Starred Review

Gr 3-5--In the small town of Eishyshok, previously Poland, now Lithuania, lived a young Jewish girl named Yaffa. Her family roots went back in the town for 900 years. Her grandmother ran a studio where people from the village came to get their photographs taken for New Year's greetings and memories. But then the war came, and the Nazi soldiers rounded up the Jews in Eishyshok and killed all but Yaffa and her family who escaped and hid. Thirty-five years later, President Jimmy Carter reached out to Yaffa and asked her to help with a memorial being built for the victims of the Holocaust. Yaffa remembered the photographs her grandmother had taken, and the ones she had hidden in her socks as she fled the village. She decided to build the memorial not on bricks, but on photographs that were saved from Eishyshok. Traveling around the world, she found 6,000 photographs to display on what would later be called the Tower of Life. Not a memorial of the dead, but of the life that came from her beloved hometown. There are many picture books about the Holocaust, but this one stands out with Gal's beautiful watercolor pictures and the true account of one woman's goal that her community never be forgotten. VERDICT A beautiful tribute to one small town and the six million Jews across Europe who lost their lives during the Holocaust. Highly recommended.--Heidi Dechief

Copyright 2022 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

Publishers Weekly

Starred Review

The creators center th experiences of historian Yaffa Eliach (1937-2016) in this moving look at the creation of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's Tower of Faces, a monument built of photographs. Early lines paint an idyllic vision of Eliach's birthplace, the shtetl Eishyshok. Gal's saturated ink, watercolor, and digital collage illustrations show the deeply rooted community, which "pulsed with love, laughter, and light" and was often caught on camera by Eliach's grandmother. When German troops and tanks arrive, the book's palette darkens into harrowing wartime graphics. Following details around Yaffa's family's escape, the text next shifts to the subject's 17-year global effort to recover 6,000 photos from those with family history in Eishyshok, and a concluding foldout pays powerful tribute to the resulting memorial: "The photos showed heroes, not victims. Dignity, not disaster. Lives lived, not lost." A timeline and bibliography conclude. Ages 6-8. (Oct.)

Copyright 2022 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.

Review quotes

Praise for The Tower of Life:

★ ". . . (When) President Jimmy Carter reached out to Yaffa (Eliach) and asked her to help with a memorial being built for the victims of the Holocaust . . . she decided to build (it) not on bricks, but on photographs that were saved from Eishyshok. Traveling around the world, she found 6,000 photographs to display on what would later be called the Tower of Life. Not a memorial of the dead, but of the life that came from her beloved hometown. There are many picture books about the Holocaust, but this one stands out with Gal's beautiful watercolor pictures and the true account of one woman's goal that her community never be forgotten. A beautiful tribute...Highly recommended." — School Library Journal, starred review

★ "It's a stunning tale, spanning decades and continents, and a tender introduction to a terrible time in human history. The watercolor illustrations, bursting with detail and life, utilize warm, bright colors in times of peace and deep reds and blacks in wartime. The drawings cleverly incorporate rectangular photograph frames into the village scenes, beautifully demonstrating the power of snapshots to memorialize beloved people and places. A magnificent and moving tribute to a loving community and an extraordinary woman." — Booklist, starred review

A Jewish Polish woman resurrects her hometown through photographs. Yaffa Eliach (1935-2016) grew up in the shtetl town of Eishyshok, Poland. She and her family lived there contentedly until the Germans occupied the town in 1941 and murdered most of its Jewish population. Yaffa and her family escaped and hid until the war ended. Before, one of Yaffa's favorite childhood activities was assisting her grandmother, the town photographer, who documented weddings, bar mitzvahs, and other celebrations; these photos were mailed to relatives around the world. Years later, Yaffa, now a married history professor and Holocaust scholar residing in America, was tasked by President Jimmy Carter with creating an exhibit for Washington, D.C.'s new United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Determined to celebrate life instead of destruction, Yaffa spent years tracking down thousands of photos of Eishyshok's residents and descendants, traveling around America and the world. The result: the Tower of Life, depicted in a 90-degree book turn. One of the actual photos contained in the memorial—included herein—shows Yaffa herself as a child in Eishyshok in her father's arms; another childhood photo of Yaffa is also included in the book. Though it tackles dark themes, this heartfelt story is ultimately uplifting. The illustrations, rendered in ink, watercolor, and digital collage, brim with warm, colorful details. A loving testament to light and hope and the vision of a remarkable woman. — Kirkus Reviews

Chana Stiefel's and Susan Gal's The Tower of Life never mentions the term ​"Holocaust," yet their new children's picture book about historian Yaffa Eliach clearly represents the antithesis of erasure. Gearing the story to young readers, Stiefel and Gal emphasize the rich legacy of one particular shtetl, kept alive through Eliach's meticulous documentation and her stunning exhibit at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Without denying the horrors inflicted on Europe's Jews, the book restores the dignity of a lost civilization both by illustrating the past and calling attention to Jewish continuity in the present.

Young Yaffa Eliach is an ordinary child blessed with a loving family and close-knit community. When the book opens, she lives in Eishyshok, a small town situated in present-day Lithuania (formerly Poland). As in other books about the Holocaust for children, there is an elegiac tone abruptly interrupted by the Nazi invasion. Scenes of sledding and skating and trips to the crowded outdoor market quickly become a distant memory as the German army assaults the town, leaving behind destruction and death.

Where another author might principally focus on the family's prewar observance of Jewish holidays, Stiefel's approach is more subtle. She foreshadows Eliach's future by describing communal trips to the cemetery, ​"where grandparents told tales of their ancestors buried beneath their feet." These stories are instrumental in ​"keeping their faith and traditions alive," and their custom will reappear later, when Eliach devotes her career to bringing her ancestors back to life. Another distinctive part of Eliach's childhood is her grandmother's photography studio. People seek out Grandma Alte's bar mitzvah portraits and Jewish New Year cards, both the products of an American camera. After the war, Eliach will undertake the ​"sacred mission ​"of recovering and arranging these profound pieces of evidence for her books and, later, her exhibit.

Eliach's family escapes from the Nazis, hiding in the forest until the Russian army liberates their home. All the while, Stiefel maintains her focus on the strength they derive from holding on to memories, and the solace Eliach finds in reading, writing, and telling inspiring stories. Although the family's shelter is tenuous, and they are ​"cold, hungry, filthy, and frightened," the book's message is consistently optimistic. Given that Eliach ultimately triumphed in recreating the past, Stiefel paints a truthful portrait appropriate for those just beginning to learn about the Holocaust.

Susan Gal's artwork, meanwhile, is both dramatic and accessible, an invitation to look at Eliach's life with compassion and awe. Children will relate to the young girl in a bright gingham dress playing with her friends, and even to the scene of her desperate family quietly reading together by candlelight in the forest. Other episodes in her life will be less familiar, but Gal's construction of a continuous visual sequence allows readers to assemble each image into one compelling picture. When the Nazis invade, the pages' white backgrounds turn deep red, peopled with dark, faceless characters. Using watercolor, ink, and digital elements, Gal combines individual portraits, landscapes, and interiors with interspersed sepia photographs. The result is a complete representation of her subject, much as Eliach achieved in her own scholarship. A vertical two-page spread of the Holocaust Museum's exhibition on Eishyshok is the culmination of a remarkable life — and of a book that ensures it will not be forgotten. — Jewish Book Council

Praise for Let Liberty Rise:

★ Playful, engaging illustrations feature speech bubbles that quote outraged citizens . . . The story of Lady Liberty's precarious beginnings shows how much can be accomplished when people band together. Rich back matter includes a time line, photos, additional information, and a bibliography. This charming history title is a true inspiration for the present. An informative must-have for all libraries. — School Library Journal, starred review

Sparkling language movingly describes how everyday folks effect powerful change. Readers will relish knowing that kids played a pivotal role in the campaign; many actual quotes from children are included. Lively, colorful illustrations capturing the period depict diverse characters and wonderful perspectives . . . The backmatter includes fascinating informative material . . . All rise to this evocative, empowering offering. — Kirkus Reviews

Groenink's cartoon-style illustrations jauntily animate Stiefel's account of how children helped ensure the Statue of Liberty would stand tall in New York Harbor . . . A timeline, bibliography, and further reading list, as well as additional statue facts and archival photos, conclude this true tale of cooperation among all ages. — Publishers Weekly

Chana Stiefel

After completing her BFA at Art Center College of Design, Susan Gal began her illustration career as a poster and calendar artist. The call of animation beckoned her to Florida where she became an "actor with a pencil" for Disney Animation. But the lure of the silver screen was not to last. Returning to her native California, Susan continues to create fun and whimsical illustrations while attempting to live a caffeine and nuclear-free life in Berkeley. Her book Welcoming Elijah, by Lesléa Newman, won the Sydney Taylor Book Award.


Chana Stiefel is the award-winning author of more than 30 humorous and heartfelt books for children. Her nonfiction books include THE TOWER OF LIFE, the true story of Holocaust survivor and historian Yaffa Eliach, who created the Tower of Faces at the US Holocaust Memorial Museum (a Junior Libary Guild Gold Medal Selection, Scholastic); LET LIBERTY RISE: How America's Schoolchildren Helped Save the Statue of Liberty (a Bank Street Best Book of the Year, Scholastic, 2021); and ANIMAL ZOMBIES & OTHER REAL-LIFE MONSTERS (a Top 10 YALSA Quick Pick, NatGeoKids). Chana's funny fictional picture books include MENDEL'S HANUKKAH MESS UP (Kalaniot), MY NAME IS WAKAWAKALOCH (HMH), and DADDY DEPOT (Feiwel & Friends). She loves to visit schools and libraries to share her passion for reading and writing with children.
Classification
Non-fiction
ISBN-13
9781338225891
Lexile Measure
-
Guided Reading Level
-
Publisher
Scholastic Press
Publication date
October 20, 2022
Series
-
BISAC categories
JNF007120 - Juvenile Nonfiction | Biography & Autobiography | Women
JNF041000 - Juvenile Nonfiction | Photography
JNF025090 - Juvenile Nonfiction | History | Holocaust
JNF070000 - Juvenile Nonfiction | Inspirational & Personal Growth
Library of Congress categories
History
20th century
Jews
Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)
Lithuania
Exhibitions
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Eiesieskces (Lithuania)
Eliach, Yaffa
Eiesieskces

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