In a stirring chronicle, Doreen Rappaport brings to light the courage
of countless Jews who organized to sabotage the Nazis and help other
Jews during the Holocaust.
Under the noses of the military, Georges Loinger smuggles thousands of
children out of occupied France into Switzerland. In Belgium, three
resisters ambush a train, allowing scores of Jews to flee from the
cattle cars. In Poland, four brothers lead more than 1,200 ghetto
refugees into the forest to build a guerilla force and self-sufficient
village. And twelve-year-old Motele Shlayan entertains German officers
with his violin moments before setting off a bomb. Through twenty-one
meticulously researched accounts--some chronicled in book form for the
first time--Doreen Rappaport illuminates the defiance of tens of
thousands of Jews across eleven Nazi-occupied countries during World War
II. In answer to the genocidal madness that was Hitler's Holocaust, the
only response they could abide was resistance, and their greatest
weapons were courage, ingenuity, the will to survive, and the resolve to
save others or to die trying.