Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Remember Us to Life

Remember Us to Life is a graphic memoir by Joanna Rubin Dranger. She is a descendant of Holocaust survivors as well as from ancestors who fled Germany and Russia in time to save themselves from danger. The story was written in Swedish and translated into English by Maura Tavares. The title of the book comes from a prayer recited every day from Rosh Hashana to Yom Kippur. The English translation of the book was published in 2025. Author Dranger showcases her search for her own identity while she slowly uncovers the truth about how her Jewish relatives "disappeared" during WWII. She does this through illustrations and photographs of documents on her relatives. Suffice to say this is an emotional story.

The publiaher's summary: "Remember Us to Life recounts Joanna’s family’s immigration from Poland and Russia to Sweden and Israel, where her relatives found work, marriage, and community, blissfully unaware of the horrors to come. Interweaving these anecdotes and stories are historical accounts of the persecution of Jewish people in Germany, Poland, Lithuania, and Russia prior to and during World War II, as well as the antisemitic policies and actions of the supposedly neutral government of Sweden, Joanna’s home country. Joanna’s unflinchingly brave and intimate portrayal of one of history’s greatest tragedies will capture and break readers’ hearts."

Deciding how to review the book was difficult. There is no way I can give all the details presented by the author. Too many of them are poignant and I could not pick one over another to be discussed here. I was surprised, though, that her Swedish relatives were counted and documented during WWII by the Swedish government. Some of these documents were discovered in the 1970s and the rest were found in the 1990s. Anti-semitic epitaphs were hurled at them even though they lived in Sweden. With Sweden advertising their liberal ideas and trying to transport them out of their country, I was surprised to read how they actually behaved. 

The memoir began with the birth of the author's favorite aunt Susanne. Susanne was born after the end of WWII but she felt all the horror of the war anyway. Susanne ended up committing suicide. The author stated that she too felt a darkness that she could not control. She developed an intense contempt for herself and she thinks that she carried a hatred of Nazism within herself. I found this surprising because the author was born a few generations after the Holocaust.

The book is an eye opening account of one family’s attempt to overcome the past. Snippets of the actions of foreign governments is interspersed throughout the book adding to the horror of the era. I am rating it 5 out of 5 stars and think this will be my book of the year for 2026. Remember Us to Life is a must read.

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Remember Us to Life

Remember Us to Life is a graphic memoir by Joanna Rubin Dranger. She is a descendant of Holocaust survivors as well as from ancestors who fl...