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A Time to Risk All - The incredible untold story of Mary Elmes, the Irish woman who saved children from Nazi Concentration Camps (Paperback)
Loot Price: R470
Discovery Miles 4 700
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A Time to Risk All - The incredible untold story of Mary Elmes, the Irish woman who saved children from Nazi Concentration Camps (Paperback)
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List price R565
Loot Price R470
Discovery Miles 4 700
You Save R95 (17%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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'I am truly grateful to Mary Elmes for the life I might not have
had, had it not been for her brave actions to save us and many
others. She was truly a heroine.' Michael Freund Mary Elmes was an
extraordinary woman. Sometimes known as the 'Irish Schindler', she
was born in Cork in 1908 and educated at Trinity College Dublin.
She won a scholarship to study at the London School of Economics
and travelled to Europe in the 1930s. There, she volunteered to
help refugees during the Spanish Civil War. Nothing could have
prepared her for the horrific suffering she would witness, but she
was determined to aid as many people as she could. When Barcelona
fell to Franco's forces, she followed the Spanish refugees to
southern France and continued to help them in the camps where they
were interned. Soon, she found herself in the middle of another
conflict, the Second World War, and was helping refugees of all
nationalities. By 1942, it became evident that Jews, who were also
held in the camps by the collaborationist Vichy authorities, were
in danger of being deported to their death. Mary Elmes risked her
life to help children and adults escape. She smuggled children out
in the boot of her car and succeeded in getting a number of adults
off the convoys going to the Nazi death camps. She was arrested and
imprisoned by the Gestapo on suspicion of espionage and carrying
out a series of hostile acts against Germany. When the war was
over, she married a Frenchman and settled down in Perpignan, never
speaking about what she had done in either conflict. When the
French government offered her its highest honour, the Legion
d'Honneur, she turned it down, preferring instead to try put the
war behind her. In 2013, she became the first Irish person to be
named 'Righteous Among the Nations' at Yad Vashem, Israel's
official memorial to Jewish victims of the Holocaust. Now, finally,
her story has come to light and a forgotten heroine will be
remembered as she deserves. 'A compelling biography of an unsung
hero' The Irish Independent 'A truly amazing and uplifting story,
I'd recommend it to anybody.' Marian Finucane 'This is the Irish
Schindler story - remarkable' Ivan Yates
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