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Resistance: The Underground War in Europe 1939-45 book review: Deserves a special place on every Jewish bookshelf

Halik Kochanski's mammoth account of the response to the Shoah is an inventory of heroes

May 12, 2022 15:30
101st with members of dutch resistance wiki
2 min read

Resistance: The Underground War in Europe 1939-45
By Halik Kochanski
Allen Lane, £35
Reviewed by Colin Shindler

A recent addition to the many books by resistance fighters that record the terrible events they were forced to live through in the war against Nazism, and the courage of their comrades who did not survive, this work by the historian, Halik Kochanski aims to, in her words, take “a clear, balanced and unified picture” of the resistance in every country in Nazi-occupied Europe.

There are two special chapters in this mammoth account. One records a Jewish response to the Shoah, the other a Christian reaction. Kochanski argues that the sheer brutality of the Nazi occupier towards Jews sensitised many a non-Jew to perform an act of resistance, no matter how seemingly insignificant.

Jean Weidner, a Dutch-born businessman and Seventh Day Adventist in France, helped smuggle Jews into Switzerland – up to 25,000 Jews were turned away at the border by the Swiss. In Italy, Giovanni Palatucci, a police commissioner, destroyed official documents, provided false identity papers and smuggled Jews out of German-occupied Rome to the free south. He was arrested and died in Dachau. It is estimated that he saved the lives of 5,000 Jews.

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