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Drawing on the diary that he kept for the pivotal
year 1943, Enzo Tayar recounts the impact on his family and friends
of the increasingly severe anti-Jewish measures instituted by Italy
and of the German invasion of their former ally. For safety, Tayar
fled his once tranquil Florence separately from his sister and
parents, taking refuge on a succession of farms throughout Tuscany.
They were not reunited until after the Allied conquest of Italy.
After liberation, Tayar served as a U.S. Army interpreter, taking
part in the interrogation of Fascists as a prelude to postwar
prosecutions. |