"'Srulik, there's no time. I want you to remember what I'm going to tell
you. You have to stay alive. You have to! Get someone to teach you how
to act like a Christian, how to cross yourself and pray. . . . The most
important thing, Srulik, ' he said, talking fast, 'is to forget your
name. Wipe it from your memory. . . . But even if you forget
everything--even if you forget me and Mama--never forget that you're a
Jew.'"
And so, at only eight years old, Srulik Frydman says goodbye to his
father for the last time and becomes Jurek Staniak, an orphan on the run
in the Polish countryside at the height of the Holocaust. With the
danger of capture by German soldiers ever-present, Jurek must fight
against starvation, the punishing Polish winters, and widespread
anti-Semitism as he desperately searches for refuge. Told with the
unflinching honesty and unique perspective of such a young child, Run,
Boy, Run is the extraordinary account of one boy's struggle to stay
alive in the face of almost insurmountable odds--a story all the more
incredible because it is true.