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        <identifier>oai:jgo:source-293.en</identifier>
        <datestamp>2025-11-14T00:00:00Z</datestamp>
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                <dc:language>en</dc:language>
                <dc:title>Dr. Max Salzberg, Summary of the autobiographical novel Auf dunkler Bahn. Die Geschichte meines Lebens [“On a Dark Path. The Story of my Life”], around 1950.</dc:title>
                <dc:identifier>https://keydocuments.net/source/jgo:source-293</dc:identifier>
                <dc:creator>Max Salzberg</dc:creator>
                <dc:publisher>Institute for the History of the German Jews</dc:publisher>
                <dc:subject/>
                <dc:type>Online Ressource</dc:type>
                <dc:description>This source is a summary of the autobiographical novel “Auf dunkler
Bahn” [“On a Dark Path”] by the private scholar Dr. Max
Salzberg. Max Salzberg was born in 1882 near Kovno (today Kaunas), in
present-day Lithuania, into an orthodox Jewish family. In 1904, he
traveled to Hamburg to treat progressive retinal detachment. The
therapy was unsuccessful and Max Salzberg became almost completely
blind. During his stay in hospital, he learned to speak fluent German.
In 1913, he graduated from the Johanneum high school in Hamburg. He
then studied philology and education in Marburg, planning to become a
German, English, and French teacher. It was also in Marburg where he
met his future wife Frida Salzberg-Heins. Based on the non-literary
sources of the estate of Frida and Max Salzberg, the Institute for the
History of the German Jews Institut für die Geschichte der deutschen
Juden – IGdJ launched a comprehensive online exhibition entitled
“A (Life) History” in 2018. The exhibition provides insights into
the Salzbergs’ life in Germany in the first half of the twentieth
century.

The source presented here comes from the literary estate of the
Salzberg couple. After Frida Salzberg-Heins’ death, the estate was
first preserved in the Altona Museum in 1998 and then in the Hamburg
State Archives. In addition to Max Salzberg’s autobiography, it
contains over 40 short stories, two stage plays, four fairy tales,
several poems, and various other documents in German, Hebrew, English,
Lithuanian, and French. The poems and stories were written by Max
Salzberg, the existing letters by Frida and Max. Max Salzberg sent
this summary to the publisher of Frankfurter Hefte, Dr. Eugen Kogon,
in 1952. Until his death in 1954, Salzberg tried unsuccessfully to
publish “Auf dunkler Bahn” [“On a Dark Path”] in German.
According to his correspondence, he planned his autobiography in two
parts – “Auf dunkler Bahn” [“On a Dark Path”] dealt with his
childhood and youth and “Auf lichter Bahn” [“On a Bright
Path”] was to tell of his life in Germany. There are no fragments of
“Auf lichter Bahn” [“On a Bright Path”] in either the Hamburg
State Archives or the Altona Museum. It therefore remains unclear
whether Salzberg ever tackled the continuation of the autobiography.</dc:description>
                <dc:date>2025-11-14</dc:date>
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