Author Talk with Janet Applefield
Tuesday, May 206:30—7:30 PMLibrary Plaza Program RoomVentress Memorial Library15 Library Plaza, Marshfield, MA, 02050
We invite you to join us for the special presentation by local author, Janet Singer Applefield, who will discuss her memoir, Becoming Janet.
Janet Singer Applefield holds a Master of Social Work from Boston University. Working with the non-profit, Facing History and Ourselves, and the Massachusetts Cultural Council, she speaks to 4,000 students a year about her experiences as a child hidden during the Holocaust and the importance of standing up to bigotry and hate. Over the past 40 years, she has presented her story at hundreds of venues including the Massachusetts State House, Faneuil Hall in Boston, Harvard University, Vanderbilt University, Westminster Synagogue in London, and the Galicia Jewish Museum in Krakow, Poland.
Becoming Janet: Finding Myself in the Holocaust (Cypress House, 2024) is a richly illustrated memoir (with study guide) that reads like a novel. Gustawa Singer, a 4-year old girl blessed with blond hair and green eyes lives in Nowy Targ, a bustling town in the snowy foothills of Poland’s Tatra Mountains. Grandparents, aunts, and uncles dote on her, and strangers admire her flawless complexion. Her father works in the Singer’s hardware store, and the family prospers. All of that is shattered on the morning of September 1, 1939, with the invasion of the German Army. After several failed attempts to flee danger, Gustawa’s parents make the agonizing decision on the evening before a mandatory SS “Selection” to give their only living child to a nanny. Assuming the identity of Krysia, a deceased Catholic girl her age, Gustawa is hidden in plain sight for the next three and half years by a handful of strangers, not all of whom have good intentions. Intuitively she keeps a secret that her looks conceal: she is Jewish. On May 8, 1945, the girl’s father emerged from the Theresienstadt camp-ghetto weighing 110 pounds. After three months of searching, he miraculously found his sole reason for living: Gustawa. Of the hundreds of Jewish children playing around the streets of her town before the war, she was the only child to return. “No amount of paper would be enough to describe our terrible hardships,” Gustawa’s father wrote to his brother in the United States. Two years later, when they arrived in America, he transcribed every detail his daughter could remember about her survival. This is the story of Becoming Janet.