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The Nine: the women who defied the Nazis

Gwen Strauss's new book tells the story of a group of incredibly courageous women

July 20, 2021 15:16
Helene
6 min read

In 2017, I was sickened by images of Neo-Nazis marching in the streets of Charlottesville, North Carolina. I remembered my great aunt Hélène’s story, told to me one day over lunch, about how she fought against fascism, joining the Resistance in France at the age of 23. She was eventually caught, tortured by the Gestapo, and deported to the concentration camp of Ravensbruck. After nine months of brutal captivity she escaped the Nazis with eight of her friends. Together they travelled across Germany in search of the US troops.

The shock of the events in Charlottesville inspired me to finally do something I had wanted to do for years. I would go to Germany and retrace Hélène’s escape route. I planned to write an article about it. The trip was also a personal pilgrimage for me. My children and I hold German passports because my grandfather, a German Jew, was made stateless by the Nazis. But I have never lived in Germany nor spent much time there. In 2017 my eldest daughter was going through a difficult time and I thought this would be a good trip for us to take together. She was worried about the state of the world and her role in it. Here was a chance for her to learn about Hélène and the fight against fascism in the Second World War.

As we explored Berlin and drove through the countryside we talked, sometimes in heated conversations, about what we could hope for and where hope could be found. I was aware of her youth and sense of urgency, and I remembered the astonishing youth of Hélène and the eight others, all in their 20s, when they joined in the Resistance.

On the last day of our trip we went to Buchenwald. It was the first visit for both of us to a former concentration camp. I had ambivalent feelings about visiting sites of suffering. I wondered about the voyeurism in so-called “dark tourism.” I had read accounts about gift shops at concentration camps. The whole commodification of the experience made me wary, as did accounts of disrespect or insensitivity of the public at these sites. It was a freezing cold January day. We had nice warm coats, but we were miserable. And there was no way we would cut the visit short or complain. Afterwards, when we drove into Weimar and warmed our hands at a tea shop, we sat in stunned silence, shattered.

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