" In the early years of World War II, it was an amazing feat for
an Allied airman shot down over occupied Europe to make it back to
England. By 1943, however, pilots and crewmembers, supplied with
"escape kits," knew they had a 50 percent chance of evading capture
and returning home. An estimated 12,000 French civilians helped
make this possible. More than 5,000 airmen, many of them American,
successfully traveled along escape lines organized much like those
of the U.S. Underground Railroad, using secret codes and stopping
in safe houses. If caught, they risked internment in a POW camp.
But the French, Belgian, and Dutch civilians who aided them risked
torture and even death. Sherri Ottis writes candidly about the
pilots and crewmen who walked out of occupied Europe, as well as
the British intelligence agency in charge of Escape and Evasion.
But her main focus is on the helpers, those patriots who have been
all but ignored in English-language books and journals. To research
their stories, Ottis hiked the Pyrenees and interviewed many of the
survivors. She tells of the extreme difficulty they had in avoiding
Nazi infiltration by double agents; of their creativity in hiding
evaders in their homes, sometimes in the midst of unexpected
searches; of their generosity in sharing their meager food supplies
during wartime; and of their unflagging spirit and courage in the
face of a war fought on a very personal level.
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