Long-Lost Essays Penned by Jewish Teens on Brink of Holocaust Inspires New Book
by Shiryn Ghermezian
A graphic nonfiction book set to be published next month is based on six autobiographies written by Jewish teenagers in Eastern Europe right before the start of World War II.
The illustrative narrative “When I Grow Up: The Lost Autobiographies of Six Yiddish Teens” was created by graphic artist, writer and New Yorker cartoonist Ken Krimstein. The YIVO Institute for Jewish Research discovered the six never-before-published autobiographies in 2017 among hundreds of other Jewish documents that were hidden in a Lithuanian church cellar.
The essays were originally submitted to three autobiography writing competitions held by YIVO in Eastern Europe in the 1930s, just before the start of the Holocaust. Prizes for the final competition were never awarded because on the same day that they were set to be handed out in 1939, the Nazis invaded Poland. The autobiographies were long thought to have been destroyed by the Nazis.
Each of the autobiographies are filled with the aspirations, observations and beliefs of the young writers, whose lives were about to be drastically altered by the horrors of the Holocaust.
“These were young people we would recognize today, with wry assessments of those around them and questions about authority and love that are the special language of teenagers,” said the book’s publisher, Bloomsbury Publishing. “These teens tell all, revealing the angst, the humor, and the ambitions they were mapping out in a world soon to disappear.”
Krimstein was one of the first people to physically hold the long-hidden autobiographies. When working on the book, he also discovered that the youngest writer, who broke the rules to participate in the writing competition, survived World War II and was among those who helped keep the essays, as well as contents of a library, from being destroyed by the Nazis and later the Soviets.
Krimstein told The Algemeiner on Tuesday that he had “an incredible feeling of personal connection” to the autobiographies because of his family’s own roots in Eastern Europe. Reading the autobiographies also gave him a glimpse into life in Eastern Europe pre-World War II, he said, something he had always hoped to explore.
The author added that when he learned about the essays, he was intrigued to explore the writings of “just normal teenagers” and their “vantage point” on the eve of World War II.
“When I Grow Up: The Lost Autobiographies of Six Yiddish Teenagers” will be published on Nov. 16, 2021.
Iran Reaffirms Support for Hezbollah With Wider Peace Deal in Doubt
Romanians Convicted of Stabbing Journalist in UK, Prosecutors Say They Acted for Iran
US Preparing Draft Resolution Condemning Iran at IAEA, Diplomats Say
Iran Using Lebanon as Bargaining Chip in US Talks, Lebanese President Says
Iran World Cup Soccer Players Granted Visas to Enter the US, Says White House Official
Israel Plans First Embassy in Slovenia, Says Foreign Minister
Turkey Weighs Major Defense Overhaul as Iran Conflict Reshapes Warfare
Oxford Union President Urged to Step Down After Justifying Oct. 7 Attack, Saying Hamas Will Be ‘Lauded as Heroes’
Miss Israel Melanie Shiraz Defends Her Credibility After Claiming 2026 Competition Is Fake, ‘Predetermined’
The US Vote to End the War Shows That Iran’s Pressure Strategy Is Working






Iran, Russia Sign $25 Billion Nuclear Cooperation Deal as Tehran Presses Ahead Amid US Talks
Qatar Has Poured Over $400 Billion Into the US, New Study Finds, Raising Alarm in DC
The US Vote to End the War Shows That Iran’s Pressure Strategy Is Working
Miss Israel Melanie Shiraz Defends Her Credibility After Claiming 2026 Competition Is Fake, ‘Predetermined’
From Exile to Innovation: What Israel Built



