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Book review: Children Against Hitler

Each story is a catalogue of close escapes and reading them is at times uncomfortably thrilling

July 23, 2020 10:50
11. Adolfo Kaminsky
1 min read

Children Against Hitler by Monica Porter (Pen & Sword, £12.99)

It might have started with a gleeful game of smashing enemy egg supplies or graffiti-ing a plane. But the “children” in Monica Porter’s revelatory book soon graduated to less childlike and more remarkable acts of resistance, including hiding Jews and luring Nazis to their death. Some of the children stole guns; some had to use them.

Porter defines “children” as 18 or under — although several in the book had left school at 14 — while the youngest here is six-year-old Helena, who carried messages to and from the ghetto, swallowing the evidence if caught.

Each story is a catalogue of close escapes and reading them is at times uncomfortably thrilling — the immediate peril of a capture or betrayal momentarily eclipsing the knowledge that these were real children, not all of whom survived.