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In the Lion's Den - The Life of Oswald Rufeisen (Paperback)
Loot Price: R387
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In the Lion's Den - The Life of Oswald Rufeisen (Paperback)
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List price R451
Loot Price R387
Discovery Miles 3 870
You Save R64 (14%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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A Jew passing as a Christian in occupied Poland during WWII, Oswald
Rufeisen worked as translator and personal secretary to a Nazi
commander of the German police, repeatedly risking his life to save
hundreds from the Nazis. A relatively unknown Jewish hero and
rescuer at the magnitude of Oskar Schindler, Rufeisen's life and
role during the Holocaust is perhaps even more riveting and complex
than the man memorialized by Stephen Spielberg in Schindler's List.
Only seventeen years old when WWII began, Rufeisen joined the
exodus of Poles who fled the approaching German army. Bright and
talented, Rufeisen used his ability to speak fluent German to pass
as half German and half Polish in Mir, where he came to serve the
German commander in charge of the gendarmerie. As he carried out
his duties - reading death sentences to prisoners, swearing in new
police officers before a portrait of Hitler - he earned the trust
and affection of the German commander, yet lived in constant fear
of discovery. He used his position to pass secret information to
Jews and Christians about impending "Aktionen" and to sabotage Nazi
plans. Most notably, he thwarted the annihilation of the Mir ghetto
by arming hundreds of Jews and organizing their escape, and saved
an entire Belorussian village from destruction. Eventually
discovered and denounced, Rufeisen escaped and found shelter in a
convent, where he converted to Catholicism. Though a pacifist, he
spent the rest of the war fighting in a Russian partisan unit,
similar to the Bielski unit of Tec's Defiance.
After the war, Father Daniel (as he came to be known) became a
priest and a Carmelite monk. Identifying himself as a Christian Jew
and an ardent Zionist, he moved to Israel, where he challenged the
Law of Return in a case that reached the High Court and attracted
international attention.
In the Lion's Den, from author Nechama Tec of Defiance and several
other astonishing accounts of Jewish survival and rescue during the
Holocaust, offers a stirring portrait of a Jewish rescuer during
the Holocaust and its aftermath, illuminating the intricate
connections between good and evil, cruelty and compassion, and
Judaism and Christianity.
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