The Sharp Elbows of Klara WeiszHolocaust Survivor Testimony - Budapest Ghetto - 1944-1945One frozen morning in November 1944, Klara Weisz was torn from her toddler son and marched toward the icy Danube by Hungarian Arrow-Cross fascists. A pistol kissed the back of her head-yet in the split-second before the trigger cracked, Klara's elbow flashed, her body lurched, and the river swallowed her instead of a bullet.This is the electrifying, first-person account of what happened next.Across four brittle pages of hand-typed testimony-rescued from a crumbling family archive-Klara narrates the next eight weeks of her life: - - The brick-factory camp, the death march, the synagogue turned shelter.- A midnight plunge beneath broken ice while machine-gun fire razored the water around her.- The barbed-wire crawl that severed the nerves in her hands but left her grip on life intact.- The compassionate strangers, ghetto policemen, and secret food baskets that kept her infant son alive until liberation.Told in unadorned, urgent prose, The Sharpened Elbow of Klara Weisz is both a thriller of escape and a mother's love letter to the helpers who materialized in shadows. Historian-approved footnotes contextualize every street and statute; original scans of the typoscope manuscript sit opposite the clear-text transcription, inviting readers to witness history in its raw, near-illegible state.Perfect for: - - Secondary-school classrooms seeking primary-source Holocaust materials- Memoir readers who treasure The Diary of Anne Frank, Night, or The Choice- Genealogists tracing Hungarian-Jewish survival stories- Anyone who needs reminding that one sharp moment of courage can redraw the line between life and death.Turn the page. Feel the cold metal. Hear the river crack. And discover why Klara's elbow is still remembered in the family as the sharpest weapon ever raised against tyranny.