In this book, noted author and teller of Jewish tales, Hanoch Teller sets out the experiences of nine Jewish children who survived the Holocaust in different parts of Europe, imbuing each story with a larger message of faith or understanding or steadfast courage as each individual protagonist faces his or her own set of challenges and uses special traits to emerge whole on the other side.
A young boy named Michael whose father had foreseen a future too many could not acknowledge and did not turn away from what he saw; a talented violinist named Cecilia whose gift for music put her into greater danger but also helped keep her safe; fourteen-year-old Srulek who understood the value of resistance in all its many faces and forms; Dolly, an infant hidden for months in a trash receptacle in a concentration camp…these children and others are shown as symbols of renewal, of a spirit that cannot be defeated and of sparks of Jewish hope. Above all, they are shown as real people who went on to have lives beyond the horrors of the Holocaust in spite of what they endured.
Photographs of the children from the times of their European childhoods to the times of their present day lives with an emphasis on their current families and new generations are included as are several introductory essays presented as forewords and prefaces and an author’s note. A glossary, bibliography, and index are appended. Recommended for ages 12 and up.
Michal Hoschander Malen is the editor of Jewish Book Council’s young adult and children’s book reviews. A former librarian, she has lectured on topics relating to literacy, run book clubs, and loves to read aloud to her grandchildren.