TY - BOOK AU - Woolf, Inge, ED - Holocaust Centre of New Zealand. TI - Resilience: a story of persecution, escape, survival and triumph SN - 9780473662080 AV - D804.3 .W665 2023 U1 - 920 WOO PY - 2023///. CY - Wellington, New Zealand : PB - Holocaust Centre of New Zealand, KW - Woolf, Inge, KW - Holocaust Centre of New Zealand KW - Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) KW - Europe KW - Jewish refugees KW - Great Britain KW - Biography KW - Jewish families KW - Jewish women KW - New Zealand KW - Autobiographies KW - lcgft N1 - Part one: Europe -- Early memories -- Persecution and Europe -- My Austrian family left behind -- The promised land -- The promised land: a postscript -- My Solovakian family left behind -- Refugees in England -- Evacuated -- Back with my family -- We knew how to flee -- Postwar London -- I get a brother and we start a business -- My mother -- My father -- Part two: The antipodes -- A new start in New Zealand -- Ronald Woolf -- Family -- Photography -- Disaster, grief and my mission -- Service -- Holocaust centre of New Zealand -- Speaking out -- The family flourishes -- The circle is complete N2 - Resilience is a Holocaust story and a New Zealand story. Born to a prosperous Jewish family, Inge Woolf witnessed the Nazis marching into Vienna in March 1938. To escape certain death, the family audaciously boarded a train to the heart of Nazi Germany - Berlin - and from there caught a plane to England, pretending they were going on holiday. Hiding their Jewish identity until after World War II, Inge and her family began a new life as impoverished refugees. A move to New Zealand signalled new beginnings. Inge met the love of her life, Ronald Woolf, and together they created the country's pre-eminent photographic studio. They settled in Wellington, raising two children when tragedy struck again with Ron killed at age 57 in a helicopter crash in 1987. Resilience is ultimately the story of a woman who harnessed her past and used it to encourage a more cohesive, inclusive society. In her later years, Inge was pivotal in establishing the Holocaust Centre of New Zealand and was its founding director. She educated thousands on the Holocaust and the dangers of antisemitism, racism and prejudice, often observing that hate starts small. She was often called on by the media to comment about antisemitism and would speak freely about the need to remember the lessons learned from the Nazi genocide. Inge Woolf received a QSO in 1992 for services to the community. She was a finalist in the 2019 Women of Influence Awards - Community Hero category. Inge Woolf died in 2021 aged 86 ER -