
“Sarah’s Key” is a historical fiction which I enjoy reading.
The novel takes place in two time periods, 1942 and 2002, and goes back and
forth between each. The writer first takes its readers to the spring of 1942 in
Paris, France during the Vel’ d’Hiv Roundup where Parisian Jewish families
(mostly women and children) where arrested by French police in German occupied
France. Although, not mentioned right away but implied early on is that Sarah
is the ten year-old girl who has been taken with her family. I was really drawn
to this character throughout the novel; a sweet, innocent girl trying to make
sense of what was happening. I wanted her to escape, I wanted her to find her
brother safe, I wanted her to live a happy life and I wanted Julia to find her.
Julia is the main character presented in the present time
(2002) and is referred to in the first person. Julia is an American journalist
who is living in France with her husband and daughter. Julia is assigned to work
on an assignment to write an article on the Vel’ d’Hiv Roundup and discovers a
connection her husband’s family has with Sarah. Julia develops quite a strong
attachment to Sarah and begins a personal quest to uncover the story of Sarah
and her family.
Like most novels, there are parts that are predictable but
there are also a few surprises included. I like how the author connected the
past with the present. However, there were two things in the novel that I was
uncomfortable with: one was swearing, not a lot but swearing is something I
really detest especially when it is used casually. The other was a seemingly
pro-choice stance on abortion.
While looking in my day timer at this week’s events I
noticed that Sunday is Holocaust Remembrance Day. I think it is important to
remember that this happened, that it was a traumatizing event, It’s affects are
still being felt, it was unjust and should never have happened and nothing like this should happen again. I think the author did a great job in
connecting her readers to the events surrounding the roundup and the fear and feelings
of betrayal that were felt. It is hard to comprehend how these Jewish families
felt, what they experienced and why it happened in the first place. Before
reading this novel I was not aware of the role that France (and apparently
other countries as well) played in the execution of Jewish people during the
War. While Nazi Germany played the largest role, other countries were also
involved. There were so many horrible things done to people during this war.
Being half German, I am sensitive to the remarks and jokes made
about Germans as a whole. Many Germans at this time did not like what was
happening to their country and to individuals because of their nationality or
religion or other views. My Grandma`s family was one of those Germans, who spoke among
themselves of the injustices. My Grandma told me that her father would often
say, ``Hitler is no good, he is no good for our country``. He died in 1935,
less than 3 years after Hitler became chancellor of Germany. Soon after he became chancellor, Hitler began taking rights away from the Jewish people. Grandma`s brother refused to
fight and was put into a prison camp and her mother who had grieved for 17 years
for the loss of her 6, 5 and 3 year old sons in a fire thanked God that her
sons were spared from the war. By the end of the war the part of Germany they
lived in had been awarded to Poland and the family was forced to leave their homes and start
over. I hope to someday visit my Grandma`s childhood home and tour the parts of
Germany and now-Poland she lived. From what I hear, the people who live in the
home are very inviting to my family members who come to visit.
It would be hard to see the places where traumatic events
took place but at the same time it is this story as told to me by my Grandma
that has sparked an interest in understanding the events that took place during World War II.