Synopsis
“Fritz Graebe’s courage justifies our faith in humankind.” —Elie Wiesel, author of Night“This book combines a story of high moral passion with all the excitement of a spy thriller. Fritz Graebe, who as a non-Jew risked his life repeatedly during World War II to save Jews from Hitler’s firing squads and death camps, was also an exceedingly astute and clever man who time and again outwitted the Nazis at their own game. Tragically there were too few Fritz Graebes to avert catastrophe for the great majority of European Jews, but his story is a reminder that during even the darkest moments of human history there are individuals who, at great personal cost, say ‘no’ to the darkness and provide beacons of light for the rest of us. As we face our own moral dilemmas, we can only hope that some of Fritz Graebe’s courage rubs off on us.” —Dr. Robert McAfee Brown, professor of theology and ethics, Pacific School of Religion, Berkeley, California
Reviews
For this book Presbyterian pastor Huneke interviewed many Holocaust survivors and the striking German construction engineer Herman ``Fritz'' Graebe, who worked on railway projects in the German-occupied Ukraine from 1941 to 1944. Graebe witnessed massacres of Polish and Soviet Jews and devoted himself to protecting Jews and others by taking them into his labor forces and providing false papers. Though some of his employees perished, others survived due partly to Graebe's subterfuges and interventions with the German authorities. After the war Graebe testified at Nuremberg and other war crimes trials, for which he was hounded out of Germany. This account does not cite sources, except for numerous quotations from interviews with Graebe. Recommended as an interesting addition to Holocaust collections and for larger public libraries. James B. Street, Santa Cruz P.L., Cal.
Copyright 1985 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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