Four Women, One Kibbutz, and the Long Road to Healing

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Anita Diamant’s Day After Night opens in 1945, in a British detention camp in Palestine, where four very different women are thrown together after surviving the Holocaust. I’ll admit, I didn’t even know these holding camps for so-called “illegal immigrants” existed, so that piece of history immediately pulled me in. Each woman carries her own kind of damage—physical, emotional, moral—and Diamant treats them as individuals, not symbols. This is very much a character study, focused on what happens after survival, when freedom turns out to be messy and complicated. The friendships feel tentative, sometimes prickly, sometimes deeply moving, and often shaped by what these women can’t say out loud. […]

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