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Revision as of 02:47, 3 June 2024
{en} Martin Gilbert. The Righteous: The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust. London: Doubleday, 2002. / American ed. New York: Henry Holt, 2003.
"This is a record and special tribute to the thousands of ordinary non-Jewish individuals who risked their lives to save Jews from the Nazis and who stood up against the most barbaric genocide in history. This book records their stories."--
"Gilbert re-creates the stories of hundreds of non-Jews who, during the Holocaust, risked their lives to help save Jews from deportation and death. Drawing on twenty-five years of original research, Gilbert takes us through Germany and every occupied country from Norway to Greece, from the Atlantic to the Baltic, where the Righteous, by their lifesaving actions, challenged Nazi barbarism. The Greek Orthodox Princess Alice, who hid Jewish families in her Athens home; a Polish woman, "the Angel of Lvov," who worked closely with the Roman Catholic Church to obtain false certificates of baptism for those in imminent danger; and Albanian Muslims, who disguised Jews as their own brethren in order for them to be saved, are just a few of the Righteous whom we encounter within these pages. Others were priests and nuns, teachers and diplomats, colleagues and neighbors: above all, "ordinary" men and women, decent human beings. According to Jewish tradition, "Whoever saves one life; it is as if he saved the entire world." The Righteous of Martin Gilbert's book certainly upheld that ideal, as they inspire us with their righteous acts to this day."--
Contents
Rescue in the East -- Eastern Galicia -- Vilna -- Lithuania -- Poland: General-government -- Warsaw -- Western Galicia -- Germany and Austria -- Germans beyond Germany -- Central Europe and the Balkans -- Norway, Finland and Denmark -- France -- Belgium and Luxembourg -- Holland -- Italy and the Vatican -- Hungary -- Camps and on the Death Marches -- Afterword.
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