Just before her death in 1998 she recorded 77 cassette tapes of audio with her son,
Hermann, for the first time chronicling her experience during the
Nazi reign. They were later compiled into a book: ''Underground in Berlin: A Young Woman's Extraordinary Tale of Survival in the Heart of Nazi Germany''. Jalowicz was a forced labourer at the Siemens arms factory in Berlin, but left after the death of her father (a sympathetic supervisor fired her, as forced labourers were not allowed to resign). In 1941, a postman tried to deliver a letter from the job centre and Jalowicz told him her "neighbour", Marie Jalowicz, had been deported. This allowed her to vanish from the records and become "submerged". She relocated multiple times over the next four years and at one stage was sold to an abusive Nazi with late-stage
syphilis for 15 marks, which added to her cover as a non-Jew. Marie evaded
Nazi capture through a long string of forgeries, impersonations, luck and help from people from every walk of life. She used her wit and charm to seduce people in positions that could help her, and moved around constantly. She took the words of a friend of hers to hear, “In absurd times, everything is absurd. You can save yourselves only by absurd means, since the Nazis are out to murder us all.” On more than one occasion she tried to flee Germany, narrowly evading apprehension and escaping back to her homeland each time. She returned to her original identity only on her deathbed, and pursued a career in academia, receiving a Ph.D. in ancient literature and art history at Berlin's
Humboldt University. ==References==