Brothers by Bernice Rubens


Brothers
Title : Brothers
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0349130132
ISBN-10 : 9780349130132
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 512
Publication : First published January 1, 1983

This immensely powerful novel follows four generations of the Bindel family as they fight for survivial in a hostile world. From imperial Russia in 1825 they head towards Western Europe, returning finally to modern Russia, where the persecution of the Jews continues. The Bindel family are knit by unbreakable bonds of love and loyalty, bonds which survive conscription into the Tsarist army in the 1830s, the Odessa pogrom of 1871, emigration to the Welsh valleys and Germany, the Nazis, the concentration camps, and the Gulags.


Brothers Reviews


  • Loes Dissel

    A powerful book. Very well wriiten and unforgettable!

  • Piper Whitehead

    Wonderful, moving book. Sheds a lot of light on the depth of anti-semitism in world history while also being a compelling story of family and love.

  • Stephen Caul

    Please read this book – I came across this book whilst browsing in the bookshop a few years ago and have subsequently many of Bernice Rubens’ book.
    The book tells the tragic and heart breaking story of several generations of the Jewish Bindel family
    The books opens up in a Tsarist dominated Russia in 1820s. Although not biological brothers we learn they are milk brothers born on the same day, to the same family - Benjamin & Reuben
    The book depicts the persecution of the Jewish people from the beginning of the nineteenth century until the latter part of the twentieth century. As 2 very young book both Benjamin and Reuben are forced into the Russian army, they both manage to cope with the army's extreme and brutal treatment of them, treatment which causes the death of many of their young fellow soldiers.
    When the do return as adults due to the on-going pogroms the escape from Russia to Wales and a move to Germany where the family is persecuted by the Nazis a subsequent return to Russia where one family member is incarcerated in a Russian mental hospital for his dissident views.

    For a book as large as it is and for a book to cover such a large timeframe over several generations, it doesn’t like go of its grip it has over you.
    At times it can be really tough to read due to its emotional impact and the brutal discrimination faced by the families is almost soul destroying but this is storytelling at its best

  • Mark

    Read this a few years ago and found it very moving. It is the examination across four generations of relationship, culture and a rediscovering of roots but I found the almost sensationalist approach to violence a drawback. By that I mean the persecution adn appalling violence perpetrated against jews by Russia pre and post revolution adn the obvious disgrace of Nazi Germany was and is well documented as it should be but Bernice Rubens overstepped the mark when she has even Nature rising up to continue the pogrom when one of the men is killed in a mining disaster in Wales. This is a lazy way, it seems to me, of tying up the loose lends of a story so as to enable the main characters to move back to Germany just in time for the Nazi's to kill a few more of them. I do not mean to belittle what is a very powerful novel and certainly don't mean to belttle the suffering of millions of people, that is my point; it seems almost as if Bernice Rubens, by her slaughtering right left and centre even those who are not liing in areas of anti-semitism , does just that. Creates an atmosphre where the reader could almost become immune to the horror because it is so universal

  • Kealan O'ver

    Possibly the toughest book I've ever read. This isn't because its not readable, because it very much is, but because its a relentless reminder of how consistently awful humans are to one another. I'm not sure I did myself any favours either by looking up, as I was reading, to see if the catastrophic events featured in the novel had any basis in reality. Unfortunately for my mental health almost all of them did.

  • Barbara

    A gripping and terrifying novel about the odyssey of four generations of the Bindel family from Odessa to Wales to Leipzig to Moscow and finally to Israel. It is quite relentless in its depiction of cruelty and inhumanity but also extremely moving in what it tells us about solidarity, love, and resilience.

  • Alisa

    "There is no cause on earth worth dying for, no God worth one's dying breath, no country worth one's martyrdom, no principle worth one's sacrifice. Only in the name of love is death worthy. And friendship. Therefore make no friends. Friendship seduces sacrifice. Avoid it."

    This inheritance is passed down from one generation of the Bindel family to the next, as they are continually prosecuted for their Jewish lineage. The theme of the book, therefore, is survival at all costs - and the perils that the Bindels go through are truly harrowing. From forced servitude in the Russian army, to the czar's murderous pogroms, to Nazi Germany concentration camps, and finally to the Soviet Union's restrictions and intolerance, the Bindel generations do all they can to live long enough to pass down the old incantation to their own children.

    This book is a lot more sober, serious, and heartbreaking than other works I read by Rubens. Truly a masterpiece of resilience and the strength of familial love.

  • Jennifer Codey

    Très bon roman qui relate l'histoire du judaisme en Europe au fil du temps. Les mauvais traitements qu'ont subi les juifs pendant des siècles sont révoltants et je crois qu'il est important de se sensibiliser aux horreurs auxquelles ils ont été soumis. J'ai beaucoup aimé le style de Mme Rubens. Je n'avais jamais lu ses romans. Bref, une belle saga familiale qui m'a permis d'apprendre, c'est super!

  • Laura Alderson

    I so thought I'd love this novel as I've enjoyed Rubens in the past. But after 150 pages of bleak, depressing story lines with no let up, I gave up. At some point we are told that, "The next years in the Bindel household were happy ones," but we aren't shown it; rather we just move on to the next tragedy. I was interested in finding out what happened to the family in the future but knew 1940s Germany was bound to feature towards the end and couldn't face it.

  • Chels S

    Page 2 and the Jews are already cursing God. Blasphemy continues every other page from there. They think He requires THEIR forgiveness...never ever have there been a more entitled group of reprobates.

  • Eifos

    Mooi verhaald. Te lang voor mij op heden. Het joodse lijden, als thema van dit boek, voelde te vaak "bekend" en "opnieuw" aan.

  • Cole

    This is a gripping book which covers some terrible events, including a pogrom, Nazi persecution and a Soviet 'psychiatric' hospital.

  • Anneleen Denoo

    Een aangrijpend familieverhaal van verschillende generaties Bindel en hun overleven. Zo’n boek waarvan ik het jammer vind dat het uit is.

  • Jennifer Gordon

    A wonderful history of four generations of a Jewish family. Moving, gripping and powerful

  • Susy Tomasiello

    Intensa, profonda e ambientata in un periodo difficile.
    Recensione completa qui

    http://imieimagicimondi.blogspot.com/...

  • Sauv

    Toen ik in groep twee zat, had ik een hele leuke kleuterjuf. Ze hield net zoveel van lezen als mijn moeder en ze leenden elkaar regelmatig mooie boeken. Eén keer was mijn moeder uitzonderlijk enthousiast over een boek van mijn juf. 'Als je later groot bent, moet je haar maar vragen of je het ook mag lenen,' zei ze tegen mij.

    Toen ik achttien was, ging ik een keer bij mijn juf op bezoek. Het bijzondere boek kwam ter sprake en ik vroeg of ik het mocht lenen. Mijn juf zei dat dat mocht, en ze vertelde dat ze het niet vaak aan mensen leende. Het was namelijk haar lievelingsboek en het was al dertig jaar lang niet meer in druk. Ze had er jaren naar gezocht, tot ze uiteindelijk een afgeschreven exemplaar in de bibliotheek van Zoutkamp had gevonden.

    Trots nam ik het boek van mijn juf mee naar huis, maar toen gebeurde er van alles in mijn leven en belandde ik in een enorme leesdip. Ik las een jaar lang nog amper een boek en toen ik eindelijk voorzichtig weer wat luchtige kost begon te lezen, durfde ik niet aan de dikke pil van mijn juf te beginnen. Tegen de tijd dat ik twintig was, waagde ik twee keer een poging, maar ik kwam nooit verder dan de eerste twintig bladzijden. Het verhaal sprak me gewoon niet aan. Ik durfde het boek echter ook niet ongelezen terug te geven, en dus bleef het maar in mijn kast staan.

    Toen mijn moeder laatst langs kwam en ze het boek nog steeds in mijn kast zag staan, kreeg ik een uitbrander dat ik mijn juf zolang op haar lievelingsboek liet wachten. Ik besloot het boek een laatste kans te geven en dit keer door te zetten, ook al zou het begin dan misschien wat taai zijn. En o wat ben ik blij dat ik het heb gedaan! Na de eerste twintig bladzijden word je volledig meegezogen in het verhaal en zul je het boek niet meer aan de kant kunnen leggen voor het uit is.

    De laatste jaren zijn er veel joodse familiegeschiedenissen uitgekomen, maar dit boek dateert al uit het begin van de jaren tachtig. De joods-Litouwse schrijfster Bernice Rubens schreef een fictief werk, maar baseerde zich daarbij wel op haar eigen familiegeschiedenis. Hierdoor weet ze op geweldige wijze de personages tot leven te wekken. Zelden heb ik zó meegevoeld met de karakters van een boek. Als lezer zit je volledig in de sfeer van het verhaal, of dat nou de pogrom van 1859 in Odessa is, het mijnwerkersleven op het Engelse platteland rond 1900, het concentratiekamp Auschwitz of de psychiatrische gevangenissen van de Sovjet-Unie. Ontzettend knap hoe een auteur zulke verschillende werelden stuk voor stuk zo realistisch kan beschrijven. Regelmatig moest ik het boek aan de kant leggen om een potje te huilen. Het is een prachtig verhaal dat je gegarandeerd nog lang bij zal blijven.

  • Corey

    This book reminded me a lot of Last of the Just by Schwarz-Bart in that it was an epic saga about a European Jewish family… but, unfortunately, (and I feel bad for saying this) Brothers was not as good. It’s hard to criticize a book which tries so hard to memorialize such a hugely tragic era (Jewish Europe from mid-1700s to 1970s) because it just sounds insensitive. My problem was with the lack of artistry in the way this book was written. The plot was quite complex and there was a huge cast of characters with repeating names (thanks for the family tree in the beginning… couldn’t have done without). But the book just read like a shopping list of life events which repeated itself over and over: birth, childhood, bar mitzvah, immigration, marriage, parenthood, death. There wasn’t much that was human or memorable about the individual characters, and throughout the book I just found myself waiting for the next huge tragedy which was inevitably around the corner… kinda depressing.

  • Beverly

    This is a family saga relating what happens to multiple generations of the Bindel Family. Starting in Russia in the 1820's, in each generation there are a set of " brothers". Each generation has to overcome some adversity -- conscription into the Czar's army, pogroms, Hitler. They test their beliefs. Each generation is given their inheritance handed down verbally by the patriarch of the family, Jacob. They are instructed that it is their duty to survive. There is no ideal worth dying for. Each generation passes this down relating the family history. One would think that they would learn from their ancestors. Yet each generation repeats in some way what has happened in the past. Okay read.

  • Koen Maegherman

    Zonder twijfel het beste en mooiste boek dat ik de voorbije jaren gelezen heb. Prachtig plot, aangrijpende beschrijvingen, spannend en ontroerend en geschreven in een meeslepende vertelstijl. En in vele opzichten actueel!
    'Er is op aarde geen zaak die waard is voor te sterven,' zei hij, 'geen God is iemands laatste adem waard, geen land iemands martelaarschap, geen principe iemands offer. Alleen in de naam van de liefde kan dood de moeite waard zijn. En in naam van de vriendschap' (pag. 58, als Jakob de melkbroers raad geeft)

  • Dirkje Abma

    This is one of those reads that stays with you a long time. I was really touched by the story-line, which I found impressive and interesting. The way Mrs. Rubens wove the stories of the brothers through time and each time its own circumstances. I love this book, it is deeply emotional and gives us an inside in the Jewish life in Russia in the 18th century and all the difficulties they had, same goes for the pre WWII period in England, than during WWII in Germany and the last period is in Russia again, full circle. A beautiful inside look at anti Semitism tendencies and how they cope with it.

  • Jessie

    The story of generations of Jewish brothers as they live under the Czar and continue in the Diaspora to Germany and Isreal. A very strong book, with authentic voices, that elicits strong feelings. I found myself talking out loud to the characters!