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Yehiel De-nurYehiel De-Nur or Dinur, was born Yehiel Finer in 1917, in Poland, near the German border. He died of cancer on July 17, 2001. During World War II De-Nur spent two years as a prisoner in Auschwitz. In 1945, he moved to British-mandate Palestine (later Israel) and became a writer-historian survivor who wrote several works in Hebrew under the pen name Ka-Tzetnik 135633. Ka-Tzetnik means, roughly, "Concentration Camper" ("K-Z", pronounced "Ka-Tzet", was the abbreviation for Konzentrationslager, the German word for concentration camp; the slavic ending "-nik" is akin to the English ending "-er"). 135633 was De-Nur's concentration camp number. His work documented the history of Nazi atrocities. He wrote pseudonymously under this name for some time before his identity was revealed at the trial of Nazi leader Adolph Eichmann in 1961. Among his most famous works was House of Dolls (1956), which described the Joy Division, a Nazi system that kept Jewish women as sex slaves in concentration camps. Works - Atrocity (translated by Nina De-Nur)
- House of Dolls (translated from Hebrew by Moshe M. Kohn)
- Star Eternal (translated by Nina De-Nur)
- Shivitti: A Vision
External links Denur, Yehiel Denur, Yehiel
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