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My Voice: Kurt Marx

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Kurt’s book is part of the My Voice Project, a collection of firsthand accounts of Holocaust survivors and refugees from Nazi persecution who settled in the UK. Growing up in Cologne under intensif...
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  • 31 March 2026
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Growing up in Cologne in the 1920s and 1930s, Kurt Marx witnessed the steady destruction of Jewish life as Nazi ideology took hold. Anti-Jewish laws stripped families of livelihoods, rights, and safety, while public humiliation and violence became commonplace. As persecution deepened, Kurt saw his community collapse and his own future disappear. After Kristallnacht, increasing restrictions forced him into labour and eventually into the wider Nazi camp system, where hunger, brutality, and relentless fear shaped daily survival. In early 1945, as Germany fell, he was driven across the country on deadly forced marches. After liberation, he faced profound loss while searching for surviving relatives and rebuilding his life. Settling in Manchester, he created a new future shaped by resilience. His testimony forms part of My Voice, The Fed’s project preserving Holocaust survivors’ recorded life stories for future generations.
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Price: £13.99
Pages: 182
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Series: My Voice: The Remarkable Life Stories of Holocaust Survivors
Publication Date: 31 March 2026
ISBN: 9781807073169
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

HISTORY / Jewish, The Holocaust, Autobiography: historical, political and military

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The Fed is Manchester's leading social care charity serving the Jewish community. In June of 2021, The Fed were awarded the Queen’s Award for Voluntary Service for the My Voice Project, the highest possible accolade for a voluntary sector group.

My mother, the rebel
My extended family
Hitler’s rise to power
Our Jewish life
Synagogues and shops smashed
An escape route without parents
Arriving in England as number 89
A busy life in the hostel
The shock of English school
Evacuation to Bedford
My anger at getting the cane
Building a Jewish community in Bedford
Starting work and getting fired!
“Do you like Hitler?”
London and the doodlebugs
My year as a farmer
Dreadful news from home
A working education
Meeting Ingrid
Ingrid’s remarkable survival
Married life and a big decision
Work hard, play hard in West Africa
The birth of our son
A happy family time
Looking forward, not back
Learning my parents’ fate
Remembering Jawne and those who died
Our growing family
Writing Ingrid’s story
The two Johannas
Saying Kaddish for my parents
Returning to Maly Trostenets
A bleak coincidence
It’s important that people know
My gift to the King
Growing up without parents
A legacy of music
I don’t hate

Glossary
My Voice volunteers
About The Fed