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The Pendulum

A Granddaughter's Search for Her Family's Forbidden Nazi Past

Julie Lindahl

Called "poetic and heartfelt" and "powerful" by a Publisher’s Weekly starred review, read about Julie Lindahl's journey to uncover the truth about her grandfather’s history as a member of Hitler's SS elite.

This gripping memoir traces Brazilian-born American Julie Lindahl’s journey to uncover her grandparents’ roles in the Third Reich as she is driven to understand how and why they became members of Hitler’s elite, the SS. Out of the unbearable heart of the story—the unclaimed guilt that devours a family through the generations—emerges an unflinching will to learn the truth. In a remarkable six-year journey through Germany, Poland, Paraguay, and Brazil, Julie uncovers, among many other discoveries, that her grandfather had been a fanatic member of the SS since 1934. During World War II, he was responsible for enslavement and torture and was complicit in the murder of the local population on the large estates he oversaw in occupied Poland. He eventually fled to South America to evade a new wave of war-crimes trials. The pendulum used by Julie’s grandmother to divine good from bad and true from false becomes a symbol for the elusiveness of truth and morality, but also for the false securities we cling to when we become unmoored. As Julie delves deeper into the abyss of her family’s secret, discovering history anew, one precarious step at a time, the compassion of strangers is a growing force that transforms her world and the way that she sees her family—and herself.

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  • Details
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  • Author
  • TOC
  • TOC
  • Reviews
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • Features
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 258 • Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-1-5381-1193-2 • Hardback • October 2018 • $24.95 • (£18.99)
978-1-5381-5961-3 • Paperback • February 2022 • $21.00 • (£15.99)
978-1-5381-1194-9 • eBook • October 2018 • $20.00 • (£14.99)
Subjects: History / Holocaust, History / Europe / General, History / Latin America / General

Julie Lindahl is an author, activist, and educator living in Sweden. She is a contributor to WBUR Cognoscenti and has been featured on National Public Radio. Julie holds a BA from Wellesley College, an MPhil in international relations from Oxford University, and was a Fulbright Scholar in Frankfurt. She is the founder of Stories for Society, a nonprofit organization for renewing the art of story-making among youth for social transformation. WBUR 90.9 won the 2018 Edward R. Murrow Award for excellence in innovation and the 2018 Associated Press Media Editor’s Award for innovation in storytelling based on a program series featuring her story.

Acknowledgments

Prologue

Part I: “Quiet Is Best”

Chapter 1: Sweden, 2015

Chapter 2: West Germany, 1989

Chapter 3: The United Kingdom, 1990

Chapter 4: Germany, 1997

Chapter 5: Germany, 2010

Chapter 6: Germany, 2012

Chapter 7: Germany, 2012

Chapter 8: Poland, 2012

Chapter 9: Germany, 2013

Chapter 10: Germany, 2013

Chapter 11: Poland, 2013

Chapter 12: Auschwitz, 2013

Chapter 13: Bosnia Herzegovina, 2014

Part II: The Red Dust

Chapter 14: Sweden, June 2015

Chapter 15: Latin America, February 2016

Chapter 16: Asuncion, February 2016

Chapter 17: Asuncion, February 2016

Chapter 18: Asuncion, March 2016

Chapter 19: Asuncion, March 2016

Chapter 20: Sao Paulo, March 2016

Chapter 21: Campo Grande, March 2016

Chapter 22: Campo Grande, March 2016

Chapter 23: Maracaju, March 2016

Chapter 24: Maracaju, March 2016

Chapter 25: Brasilia, March 2016

Chapter 26: Stockholm, May 2017

Suggested Reading

About the Author

In this powerful and solemn memoir, Lindahl (Rose in the Sand), who was born in Brazil to a German family, recounts seeking the truth about her grandparents’ Nazi past, which her family hid from her. In prose that is formal, yet poetic and heartfelt (“While truth can be elusive, often staring at us from outside the rain-spattered window of our own perception, the failure to believe that it exists... is the seed of self-destruction”), Lindahl shares what she learned during seven years of research and travel. Many readers will be moved and find meaning in Lindahl’s journey to come to terms with her family’s past and process the guilt of inherited sins
— Publishers Weekly, Starred Review


In a work a lifetime in the making, [Lindahl] writes of her awakening to the pieces missing in her history and the drive that led her to ask difficult questions about her grandparents and their roles in the Nazi SS . . . From discovering unknown family in South America to accepting that wounds were necessary to open in order to heal, Lindahl shows how generations can suffer silence and shame throughout the years, and the importance of coming to terms with the truth in order to find closure. This powerful work reveals how people adversely impacted by the past persevere, even while living alongside the perpetrators who still carry prejudice.
— Library Journal


A sustained rumination on the morbid past and how vitally essential it is to confront this honestly. . . [Lindahl] has set an example we must hope her students and our society will follow.”
— The Historian


A book of immense courage, written with elegance and great power.
— Philippe Sands, author of East West Street, Professor at University College London


An extraordinary meditation on evil and complicity, and on the role future generations play when trying to uncover a perfidious past. With a brilliant prose that often reads as poetry, Julie Lindahl explores and discovers her family’s Nazi past. A narrative that is deeply moving as well as informative in its history.
— Marjorie Agosin, Wellesley College; author of I Lived in Butterfly Hill


Julie Lindahl has a kind of courage that is rarely found. Her truthfulness is a rigorous and raw inquiry into history through her own ancestry. She avoids the quick gloss and embraces the hard work of holding her family’s intergenerational traumas up to the light. What shines through is difficult, but loving. The story is horrible and yet filled with possibility. While her writing is beautiful and effortless, the subject she carries is anything but. I deeply respect her willingness to face the cultural complexity that lives in her own skin.
— Nora Bateson, author of Small Arcs of Larger Circles; award-winning filmmaker of “An Ecology of Mind”


I opened The Pendulum and immediately found myself drawn into it. As a historian, I often wondered how we could profit from the determined pursuit of haunted family stories by descendants of individual perpetrators. Here’s the breathtaking answer.
— Jochen Böhler, Friedrich-Schiller University, Jena


In the literature of the Holocaust, the story of the perpetrator is rarely told from ‘the inside.’ Julie Lindahl has taken on this painstaking task when she tells us the story of her family. It is written from the heart but has outstanding literary qualities—a rare but phenomenal combination. The result is a very important book that is difficult to put down before you reach the end.
— Stefan Einhorn, Karolinska Institute; author of The Art of Being Kind


Outstanding insights into the aftermath of World War II and the Holocaust—based on the perspective of both perpetrators and their descendants. The book is indispensable for anyone who wants to see the extent and complexity of the lasting influence of war, not only in its own time but also for future generations.
— Eskil Franck, Uppsala University; Former Director, The Living History Forum


A powerful book about good and evil that has become even more important in today’s climate of mounting far-right extremism and alternative facts.
— Hédi Fried, author, psychologist, and Holocaust survivor


I have never read a book as perceptive, intuitive, and courageous as Julie Lindahl’s memoir. She is the first of her generation to describe the reverberations of that terrible Darwinism, that ‘Herrenmensch’ orientation, and its overwhelming consequences so profoundly. I thank her with all my heart.
— Gerhard Hoch, theologian and historian of Nazism in Schleswig-Holstein


An intimate investigation into family truth and lies, shame and grief, anger and indignation. Unfolding like a mystery novel with the very highest stakes, it not only looks with honesty and wisdom at the past but purposefully asks what we're going to make of it for the future. The brilliance and novelty of Lindahl's courageous journey lies in situating her own family history within our collective experience and common pain, thereby reawakening our shared duty to break the silence and go make things better.


— Derek B. Miller, internationally bestselling author of Norwegian by Night


As we travel with Julie Lindahl, we gain a deeper capacity for justice, compassion and commitment to confront today’s unthinkable evils. Her investigation and the publication of her excruciating family history have come at a high personal cost—but also with the joy of discovering long-lost relatives and building a global family of survivors and readers. We all are now deeply indebted to her.


— Piroska Nagy-Mohacsi, Institute of Global Affairs, London School of Economics


The Nazi past casts long shadows and leaves many traumatized to this day. Julie Lindahl digs deep into her own family history to uncover dark secrets dating back to the Holocaust. The Pendulum is a deeply engaging and captivating human search for answers, atonement, and closure.
— Gerald J. Steinacher, University of Nebraska, author of Nazis on the Run


A powerful, painfully human, and honest work of words and heart...Beautiful in the writing sense, horrific in reflection upon all the lives.
— James Wine, American poet, writer, and filmmaker


The Pendulum is an extraordinary and very timely book. Julie Lindahl keeps the reader deeply engaged with her clear and poetic voice. Reading this book is like reading a mystery story as the reader is experiencing the urgency of the search for truth; we are with her as she is turning over one stone after another, each revealing the undeniable cruelty that had torn her family apart. This is a journey in which every subtle emotional shift is described with great fidelity. The reader will have great appreciation for Lindahl’s fearless introspection and her most engaging way of sharing her insights with us.
— Anna Ornstein, M. D. Professor of child psychiatry (retired), University of Cincinnati


This deeply impressive book is relentlessly honest and raises many pertinent questions about the aftermath of trauma, who we are in relation to the past, and the ways in which destructive ideologies and bigotry can affect the next generation and must be dealt with. It gave my students an understanding of shame legacies and how they can be unpacked with sincerity and compassion.
— Nancy Harrowitz, Director of Holocaust, Genocide and Human Rights Studies, Boston University


A clear-sighted and courageous reckoning with a family's problematic legacy and the trauma that has affected it for generations. The story raises interesting questions about memory, legacy and reconciliation. The language is well crafted with compelling momentum, and the personal portraits are nuanced and credible. The Pendulum is a worthy, at times challenging, read about guilt, trauma, and the difficulty of reconciling with the past.
— BTJ (Swedish Library Service)


7/11/22, TEDx Talk: Julie Lindal gave a talk about "Who has the right to history?"

Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=30LLEoGcKLs



8/1/20: The BBC World Service's "Outlook" featured the book; “Discovering my grandfather's secret Nazi past.”

Link: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/w3cszf02



9/17/20: Snap Judgement interviewed author on podcast “Shame.”

Link: https://snapjudgment.org/episode/shame/



5/20/22, WBUR Boston: Julie Lindahl wrote about her grandfather and the book.


Link: https://www.wbur.org/cognoscenti/2022/05/20/ukraine-russia-vladimir-putin-donald-trump-julie-lindahl



6/1/22, The Memory Generation Podcast: Julie Lindahl spoke with Rachael Cerrotti in this episode created in partnership with the USC Shoah Foundation.

Link: https://www.memorygenerationpodcast.com/julie-lindahl



The Pendulum

A Granddaughter's Search for Her Family's Forbidden Nazi Past

Cover Image
Hardback
Paperback
eBook
Summary
Summary
  • Called "poetic and heartfelt" and "powerful" by a Publisher’s Weekly starred review, read about Julie Lindahl's journey to uncover the truth about her grandfather’s history as a member of Hitler's SS elite.

    This gripping memoir traces Brazilian-born American Julie Lindahl’s journey to uncover her grandparents’ roles in the Third Reich as she is driven to understand how and why they became members of Hitler’s elite, the SS. Out of the unbearable heart of the story—the unclaimed guilt that devours a family through the generations—emerges an unflinching will to learn the truth. In a remarkable six-year journey through Germany, Poland, Paraguay, and Brazil, Julie uncovers, among many other discoveries, that her grandfather had been a fanatic member of the SS since 1934. During World War II, he was responsible for enslavement and torture and was complicit in the murder of the local population on the large estates he oversaw in occupied Poland. He eventually fled to South America to evade a new wave of war-crimes trials. The pendulum used by Julie’s grandmother to divine good from bad and true from false becomes a symbol for the elusiveness of truth and morality, but also for the false securities we cling to when we become unmoored. As Julie delves deeper into the abyss of her family’s secret, discovering history anew, one precarious step at a time, the compassion of strangers is a growing force that transforms her world and the way that she sees her family—and herself.

Details
Details
  • Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
    Pages: 258 • Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
    978-1-5381-1193-2 • Hardback • October 2018 • $24.95 • (£18.99)
    978-1-5381-5961-3 • Paperback • February 2022 • $21.00 • (£15.99)
    978-1-5381-1194-9 • eBook • October 2018 • $20.00 • (£14.99)
    Subjects: History / Holocaust, History / Europe / General, History / Latin America / General
Author
Author
  • Julie Lindahl is an author, activist, and educator living in Sweden. She is a contributor to WBUR Cognoscenti and has been featured on National Public Radio. Julie holds a BA from Wellesley College, an MPhil in international relations from Oxford University, and was a Fulbright Scholar in Frankfurt. She is the founder of Stories for Society, a nonprofit organization for renewing the art of story-making among youth for social transformation. WBUR 90.9 won the 2018 Edward R. Murrow Award for excellence in innovation and the 2018 Associated Press Media Editor’s Award for innovation in storytelling based on a program series featuring her story.

Table of Contents
Table of Contents
  • Acknowledgments

    Prologue

    Part I: “Quiet Is Best”

    Chapter 1: Sweden, 2015

    Chapter 2: West Germany, 1989

    Chapter 3: The United Kingdom, 1990

    Chapter 4: Germany, 1997

    Chapter 5: Germany, 2010

    Chapter 6: Germany, 2012

    Chapter 7: Germany, 2012

    Chapter 8: Poland, 2012

    Chapter 9: Germany, 2013

    Chapter 10: Germany, 2013

    Chapter 11: Poland, 2013

    Chapter 12: Auschwitz, 2013

    Chapter 13: Bosnia Herzegovina, 2014

    Part II: The Red Dust

    Chapter 14: Sweden, June 2015

    Chapter 15: Latin America, February 2016

    Chapter 16: Asuncion, February 2016

    Chapter 17: Asuncion, February 2016

    Chapter 18: Asuncion, March 2016

    Chapter 19: Asuncion, March 2016

    Chapter 20: Sao Paulo, March 2016

    Chapter 21: Campo Grande, March 2016

    Chapter 22: Campo Grande, March 2016

    Chapter 23: Maracaju, March 2016

    Chapter 24: Maracaju, March 2016

    Chapter 25: Brasilia, March 2016

    Chapter 26: Stockholm, May 2017

    Suggested Reading

    About the Author

Reviews
Reviews
  • In this powerful and solemn memoir, Lindahl (Rose in the Sand), who was born in Brazil to a German family, recounts seeking the truth about her grandparents’ Nazi past, which her family hid from her. In prose that is formal, yet poetic and heartfelt (“While truth can be elusive, often staring at us from outside the rain-spattered window of our own perception, the failure to believe that it exists... is the seed of self-destruction”), Lindahl shares what she learned during seven years of research and travel. Many readers will be moved and find meaning in Lindahl’s journey to come to terms with her family’s past and process the guilt of inherited sins
    — Publishers Weekly, Starred Review


    In a work a lifetime in the making, [Lindahl] writes of her awakening to the pieces missing in her history and the drive that led her to ask difficult questions about her grandparents and their roles in the Nazi SS . . . From discovering unknown family in South America to accepting that wounds were necessary to open in order to heal, Lindahl shows how generations can suffer silence and shame throughout the years, and the importance of coming to terms with the truth in order to find closure. This powerful work reveals how people adversely impacted by the past persevere, even while living alongside the perpetrators who still carry prejudice.
    — Library Journal


    A sustained rumination on the morbid past and how vitally essential it is to confront this honestly. . . [Lindahl] has set an example we must hope her students and our society will follow.”
    — The Historian


    A book of immense courage, written with elegance and great power.
    — Philippe Sands, author of East West Street, Professor at University College London


    An extraordinary meditation on evil and complicity, and on the role future generations play when trying to uncover a perfidious past. With a brilliant prose that often reads as poetry, Julie Lindahl explores and discovers her family’s Nazi past. A narrative that is deeply moving as well as informative in its history.
    — Marjorie Agosin, Wellesley College; author of I Lived in Butterfly Hill


    Julie Lindahl has a kind of courage that is rarely found. Her truthfulness is a rigorous and raw inquiry into history through her own ancestry. She avoids the quick gloss and embraces the hard work of holding her family’s intergenerational traumas up to the light. What shines through is difficult, but loving. The story is horrible and yet filled with possibility. While her writing is beautiful and effortless, the subject she carries is anything but. I deeply respect her willingness to face the cultural complexity that lives in her own skin.
    — Nora Bateson, author of Small Arcs of Larger Circles; award-winning filmmaker of “An Ecology of Mind”


    I opened The Pendulum and immediately found myself drawn into it. As a historian, I often wondered how we could profit from the determined pursuit of haunted family stories by descendants of individual perpetrators. Here’s the breathtaking answer.
    — Jochen Böhler, Friedrich-Schiller University, Jena


    In the literature of the Holocaust, the story of the perpetrator is rarely told from ‘the inside.’ Julie Lindahl has taken on this painstaking task when she tells us the story of her family. It is written from the heart but has outstanding literary qualities—a rare but phenomenal combination. The result is a very important book that is difficult to put down before you reach the end.
    — Stefan Einhorn, Karolinska Institute; author of The Art of Being Kind


    Outstanding insights into the aftermath of World War II and the Holocaust—based on the perspective of both perpetrators and their descendants. The book is indispensable for anyone who wants to see the extent and complexity of the lasting influence of war, not only in its own time but also for future generations.
    — Eskil Franck, Uppsala University; Former Director, The Living History Forum


    A powerful book about good and evil that has become even more important in today’s climate of mounting far-right extremism and alternative facts.
    — Hédi Fried, author, psychologist, and Holocaust survivor


    I have never read a book as perceptive, intuitive, and courageous as Julie Lindahl’s memoir. She is the first of her generation to describe the reverberations of that terrible Darwinism, that ‘Herrenmensch’ orientation, and its overwhelming consequences so profoundly. I thank her with all my heart.
    — Gerhard Hoch, theologian and historian of Nazism in Schleswig-Holstein


    An intimate investigation into family truth and lies, shame and grief, anger and indignation. Unfolding like a mystery novel with the very highest stakes, it not only looks with honesty and wisdom at the past but purposefully asks what we're going to make of it for the future. The brilliance and novelty of Lindahl's courageous journey lies in situating her own family history within our collective experience and common pain, thereby reawakening our shared duty to break the silence and go make things better.


    — Derek B. Miller, internationally bestselling author of Norwegian by Night


    As we travel with Julie Lindahl, we gain a deeper capacity for justice, compassion and commitment to confront today’s unthinkable evils. Her investigation and the publication of her excruciating family history have come at a high personal cost—but also with the joy of discovering long-lost relatives and building a global family of survivors and readers. We all are now deeply indebted to her.


    — Piroska Nagy-Mohacsi, Institute of Global Affairs, London School of Economics


    The Nazi past casts long shadows and leaves many traumatized to this day. Julie Lindahl digs deep into her own family history to uncover dark secrets dating back to the Holocaust. The Pendulum is a deeply engaging and captivating human search for answers, atonement, and closure.
    — Gerald J. Steinacher, University of Nebraska, author of Nazis on the Run


    A powerful, painfully human, and honest work of words and heart...Beautiful in the writing sense, horrific in reflection upon all the lives.
    — James Wine, American poet, writer, and filmmaker


    The Pendulum is an extraordinary and very timely book. Julie Lindahl keeps the reader deeply engaged with her clear and poetic voice. Reading this book is like reading a mystery story as the reader is experiencing the urgency of the search for truth; we are with her as she is turning over one stone after another, each revealing the undeniable cruelty that had torn her family apart. This is a journey in which every subtle emotional shift is described with great fidelity. The reader will have great appreciation for Lindahl’s fearless introspection and her most engaging way of sharing her insights with us.
    — Anna Ornstein, M. D. Professor of child psychiatry (retired), University of Cincinnati


    This deeply impressive book is relentlessly honest and raises many pertinent questions about the aftermath of trauma, who we are in relation to the past, and the ways in which destructive ideologies and bigotry can affect the next generation and must be dealt with. It gave my students an understanding of shame legacies and how they can be unpacked with sincerity and compassion.
    — Nancy Harrowitz, Director of Holocaust, Genocide and Human Rights Studies, Boston University


    A clear-sighted and courageous reckoning with a family's problematic legacy and the trauma that has affected it for generations. The story raises interesting questions about memory, legacy and reconciliation. The language is well crafted with compelling momentum, and the personal portraits are nuanced and credible. The Pendulum is a worthy, at times challenging, read about guilt, trauma, and the difficulty of reconciling with the past.
    — BTJ (Swedish Library Service)


Features
Features
  • 7/11/22, TEDx Talk: Julie Lindal gave a talk about "Who has the right to history?"

    Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=30LLEoGcKLs



    8/1/20: The BBC World Service's "Outlook" featured the book; “Discovering my grandfather's secret Nazi past.”

    Link: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/w3cszf02



    9/17/20: Snap Judgement interviewed author on podcast “Shame.”

    Link: https://snapjudgment.org/episode/shame/



    5/20/22, WBUR Boston: Julie Lindahl wrote about her grandfather and the book.


    Link: https://www.wbur.org/cognoscenti/2022/05/20/ukraine-russia-vladimir-putin-donald-trump-julie-lindahl



    6/1/22, The Memory Generation Podcast: Julie Lindahl spoke with Rachael Cerrotti in this episode created in partnership with the USC Shoah Foundation.

    Link: https://www.memorygenerationpodcast.com/julie-lindahl



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