Saving the Jews Amazing stories of men and women who defied the "final solution"

Mordecai Paldiel

Book - 2000

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Subjects
Published
Rockville, Md. : Schreiber Pub 2000.
Language
English
Main Author
Mordecai Paldiel (-)
Physical Description
xiii, 338 p. : ill
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (p. [309]-330) and index.
ISBN
9781887563550
  • Preface
  • 1. Setting the Stage
  • 2. Protest and Alarm Sounding
  • The German Scientist Who Refused a Vacant Post on Moral Grounds
  • The German Activist Who Addressed a Protest to Hitler
  • The Polish Underground Courier Whose Alarm Went Unheeded
  • The German SS Who Attempted to Expose the Horrors
  • 3. Escape and Visas
  • The British Official in Berlin Who Issued Visas to Many Places in the British Empire
  • The American Who Saved Thousands In France
  • One way Ticket to Curacao Via Japan
  • 4. Sheltering and Hiding
  • Mathematical Schooling in An Underground Shelter
  • The Lithuanian Carpenter's Determination to Save Many Lives
  • Detective Work to Discover a Rescuer
  • A Chance Meeting in Warsaw Reunites Rescuer and Rescued
  • The Slovak Surgeon Who Rescued His Patients
  • The German Woman Who Loved a Jewish Woman
  • The Albanian Photo Shop Clerk Who Saved His Jewish Employers
  • The Bosnian Angels of Mercy
  • 5. Subterfuge Methods
  • How a German Official Saved 3000 Dutch Jews under the Noses of the SS
  • The German Hemophiliac Who Died Attempting to Save Jewish Laborers
  • The Hungarian Officer Who Saved By Conscripting to Forced Labor
  • The Italian Who Saved Thousands of Hungarian Jews by Posing as a Spanish Diplomat
  • The Turkish Consul in Rhodes Who Saved 50 Jews by Declaring Them Turks
  • 6. Rescuers Punished for Showing Compassion
  • The German Farmer Who Paid with His Life for Sheltering a Jew
  • The German Woman Who Openly Defied the Nuremberg laws
  • The French Woman Physician, "One of the Most Remarkable Persons Humanity Has Ever Known"
  • Killed by His Own People for Sheltering Jews
  • 7. Sheltering Children
  • Two Dutch Boys Who Saved a Jewish Girl by "Kidnapping" Her
  • The Belgian Headmistress Who Was Mother and Rescuer of 80 Jewish Children
  • The Son of a Fallen Soldier Repays a Debt to Dutch Rescuers
  • Honoring a Gypsy Rescuer
  • The Belgian Rescuer's Attempt to Keep a Hidden Boy
  • Who Am I?
  • The Double Life of a Rescued Child
  • A Coming to Terms with One's Traumatic Childhood before Life's End
  • 8. Clergy in Various Robes
  • A Personal Search Leads to Discovery of Many Clergy Rescuers
  • A Nun with a Broken Heart
  • The Martyrdom of a Russian Nun in Paris
  • A Prince of the Church and of Humanity
  • 9. Death Marches
  • Rescue of Two Sisters on the Verge of Collapse
  • Escape and Shelter during the Auschwitz Death March
  • Saving One Jewish Girl
  • 10. Those Who Did Not Qualify
  • Rescuing Jews to Benefit Himmler!
  • Saving at a Price while Causing Harm
  • Collaboration with the Enemy?
  • Killed Innocent Person after the War
  • Others Saved, Not Him; Title Annulled
  • I Am a Jew--The Righteous Honor is Reserved for Non-Jews
  • Concluding Thoughts
  • Appendix A. The Jewish Connection
  • Saved Children inside the Lion's Den
  • Saved over 500 Children
  • The Vast Network of Mr. Andre
  • Appendix B. Godmother to 300 Children
  • Appendix C. The Unknown Righteous
  • Appendix D. Righteous Among the Nations--Per Country and Ethnic Origin
  • Notes
  • Suggested Short Bibliography
  • Index
Review by Choice Review

Based primarily on the files at Yad Vashem, which depict the experiences of righteous gentiles, Saving the Jews is a montage that offers the reader a glimpse of light in an otherwise dark time. Paldiel begins by recounting a few stories dealing with those who protested the antisemitic initiatives of the regime and tried to warn the world of Nazi intentions. Subsequent stories portray how rescuers operated in their daily lives. A special chapter describes the world of hidden children and the posttraumatic effects they suffered. Even though institutional churches did not exhibit heroic moral behavior, individual clergy, as their stories reveal, did. Most intriguing are those stories that recount the cases of those who saved individual Jews, but for various reasons were declined the "righteous" title. The appendixes describe the role played by Jewish rescuers as well as the need to honor them, deal with the unknown righteous, and give a statistical country-by-country breakdown of those honored at Yad Vashem. Even though little analysis is employed, the variety of experiences recounted compels the reader to reflect on the values, attitudes, and patterns of behavior behind moral actions. General and undergraduate collections. D. J. Dietrich; Boston College

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Booklist Review

Presented here are 47 accounts of Gentiles who saved Jews during the Holocaust, nonJews who have been honored by Israel's Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial as Righteous Gentiles. Paldiel, director of the Righteous Among the Nations program at Yad Vashem, was rescued (along with his family) by a French priest during the Holocaust; the priest helped them escape from France into Switzerland. Of the 70 people Paldiel chronicles (some accounts involve more than one person, and one story concerns 10 British POWs), Varian Fry is the only recognized hero. Fry, an American, saved thousands of Jews in France by providing them with escape routes and visas and passports--some valid, some false. Among the other men and women documented are a Lithuanian carpenter who hid 12 Jews (and was assassinated by a fellow Lithuanian in 1952), and a Turkish consul general in Rhodes who saved 50 Jews by declaring them to be Turks. This is a perceptive and moving account of little-known individuals who risked their lives and the lives of their loved ones. --George Cohen

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.