01915cam a22003613a 450000100070000000500170000700800410002401000170006501600160008202000150009803500270011304000290014004100120016905000240018105500250020508200180023010000300024824500220027826000360030030000210033650008280035763000320118565000230121765000240124065000200126465000160128465000190130065000170131990600450133694200150138195201380139699900190153411936820240123172952.0040429s2004 onc j 000 f eng  a 2004106595 a20049027719 a0887766803 a(CStRLIN)MAHH05-B10368 aCaOONLbengcCaOONLdDLC aEnglish00aMLCS 2006/43675 (P) 3aPS8595 I814bN6 200404ajC813/.54222 aWiseman, EvaeAuthor985210aNo one must know  aToronto :bTundra Books,c2004. a194 p. :c20 cm. aChosen for inclusion in the reading list for the 2006 Manitoba Young Readers' Choice Award It is 1957 and Alexandra's immigrant family is living the North American dream. Her father is a respected doctor, and she has a warm circle of good friends from church, from girl guides, and from school. Perhaps her mother is nervous and a bit odd - she seems incapable of leaving the house alone - and there is never any talk of the life they left behind in Hungary, but every family has its quirks. Alexandra's world is turned upside down when she discovers a secret that her parents have kept. They are not Catholic, as Alexandra believes. They are Jewish. Alexandra's view of her parents, of her friends, and of the society in which she lives is turned upside down by her discovery. Who is she and where does she really belong? 0aYoung Adult Literature9277 0aJewsxPersecutions 5aHungarian Canadians 0aPrejudices9853 0aRacism9854 0aChildhood9855 0aParents9856 a7bcbcccopycatd2eepcnf20gy-gencatlg 2udccBKn0 00102udc40708FICa12.10b12.10cPH - Young Adult Literatured2024-01-23l0oWISpA28225r2024-01-23 17:30:53t1w2024-01-23yBKu c119368d119368