Maya's dance by Helen Signy

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Maya’s Dance is ultimately two stories running parallel; the major story being the incredible journey of survival for Maya Schulze and the minor story being about Kate Young, a journalist living with her own heartache who listens to Maya’s story in 1995 and shares it with others.  

Author Helen Signy was inspired by the story of Lucie Pollak-Langford, who survived horrific conditions as a Jewish slave worker in a Nazi-run Polish labour camp in Sawin. Much of this story has been written from testimonies, interviews and the self-published memoir of Lucie before her passing in Sydney 2021.

Maya, a Jewish girl from Prague in the Czech Republic, loved to dance and this was her whole life until she was 17 when her family was cruelly transported to Poland. While they were not sent to a death camp, their time at Sawin was really about being worked to death building irrigation channels for the Nazi regime. Five hundred Jewish people were marched into the camp in 1942 and one year later only 38 remained. During that time, the prisoners were starved, beaten and forced to live and work under inhumane conditions. 

For Maya, now suffering from bouts of dementia, retelling Kate her story opens up so many memories, mainly full of despair but also of joy when a young Polish engineer enters Maya’s life. Maya chooses to dance in a camp concert, and it is there that Jan Novak sets his eyes and heart on her. Jan becomes central to Maya’s survival and engineers her escape to safety. In 1995, Maya firmly believes Jan is still alive and in telling her story and with Kate’s help, she hopes to find him.

This fictitious story, with its many twists and turns especially towards the end of the story, will leave the reader in awe of Maya’s instincts for survival, her resilience and the joy she now finds in the everyday. The growing friendship that develops between Kate and Maya is a lifeline for both characters and fills a void that they may not have realised they needed.

Maya’s Dance is a highly engaging read that also comes with an important Author’s Note that provides further background information for the story.

Themes: Holocaust Survivors, Memories, Truth, Choices, Survival, Degradation, Loss, Hope, Enduring love.

Kathryn Beilby

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