Hanna Krall
Hanna Krall is a Polish writer with a degree in journalism from the University of Warsaw, specializing among other subjects in the history of the Holocaust in occupied Poland.
Personal life
Krall is of Jewish origin, the daughter of Salomon Krall and Felicia Jadwiga née Reichold. She was born in Warsaw, Poland, but her date of birth is contested between 20 May 1935 and 20 May 1937. She was four years old, living in Lublin, when World War II began with the Nazi German invasion of Poland. Krall lost most of her close relatives in the Holocaust, including her mother and father, who were murdered in Majdanek. She survived deportations to death camps only because she was hidden from the Germans by the Polish rescuers. After the war, she stayed in her childhood home in Otwock until going to the University of Warsaw for her education from 1951 to 1955.She is married to reporter Jerzy Szperkowicz and together have one daughter, Katarzyna.
Career
Journalism
After Krall finished her studies in journalism, she started working for the Polish local paper Życie Warszawy from 1955 to 1966. She debuted her first article In 1966, she left the paper and began to write for the well known magazine Polityka. In 1981, Wojciech Jaruzelski, then Prime Minister of the former People's Republic of Poland, declared martial law, Krall was forced to leave Polityka. Afterwards, she worked as a freelance writer for the rest of the decade, writing articles for the Catholic newsletter Tygodnik Powszechny''.'' In the early 90s, after the fall of Communism, she started writing articles for the Gazeta Wyborcza, under Adam Michnik.Books
During Krall's time working for Polityka, she published her first book named Na wschód od Arbatu in 1972, written after she spent several years as a correspondent in Moscow. The book depicted day-to-day life in Moscow during the 1960s.Commercial success came with the publication of the 1977 Zdążyć przed Panem Bogiem. The book is based on an interview with a Polish Jewish cardiologist and social activist, Marek Edelman, who was one of the founders of Żydowska Organizacja Bojowa and who took over its leadership after the head-commander Mordechai Anielewicz had perished. 'Shielding the Flame can be seen as a model for most of Krall's works. Krall describes the relations between Jews, Poles and Germans during the Holocaust and the years thereafter.
Her most famous success Król kier znów na wylocie has been translated into 17 languages an earned many awards since its publication in 2006, including the German Würth Preis for European Literature 2012 and the Found in Translation Award 2014.
Apart from the central Holocaust theme, Krall's writings also reflect her search for her own identity, as can be seen very clearly in Dowody na istnienie. Another theme in this book is the often complicated destiny of the Polish people in history and the influence of the past on people's lives in the present. Krall was a friend of Krzysztof Kieślowski and Krzysztof Piesiewicz, and inspired Decalogue Number 8 in the series of films made by these two men.
Her publication Widok z okna na pierwszym piętrze was a collaboration for the film Krótki Dzień ''Pracy by Kieślowski.
Her works have been translated into many languages and have received the most recognition in Germany and Sweden. The Belarusian 2015 Nobel Laureate Svetlana Alexievich described Krall as a key influence. Krall was a member of the Polish Writer's Union from 1978 to 1983 and the Stowarzyszenie Pisarzy Polskich'' from 1989 to 2020.
Books in English translation
- Shielding the flame : an intimate conversation with Marek Edelman, the last surviving leader of the Warsaw ghetto uprising
- The subtenant / To outwit God. Includes Shielding the Flame titled as To Outwit God.
- To steal a march on God. Dramatization of Shielding the Flame.
- The woman from Hamburg and other true stories. Includes Taniec na cudzym weselu and Dowody na istnienie.
- ''Chasing the King of Hearts''