25 Aug / The Hidden Girl: A True Story of the Holocaust by Lola Rein Kaufman with Lois Metzger
Lola Rein Kaufman’s “‘memory button'” got turned on on September 17, 1939, when Russian tanks, trucks, and soldiers entered her small hometown of Czortków in what was then Poland. She was not yet 5 years old. Before she reached her 10th birthday, she lost her father, then her mother in rapid succession, and watched extended family and friends disappear. Yet Lola was one of the few “lucky” children … “[b]ecause so many did not survive” the devastation of Hiter’s Final Solution that wiped out six million of the nine millions Jews living in Europe in 1939.
Lola’s grandmother entrusted Lola to a Ukrainian woman who hid her in a back room until the Nazi threat came too close. Lola fled again to the home of another brave family, where she spent nine months buried in a dark hole beneath the family barn. Having left her grandmother in an embroidered dress her talented seamstress mother lovingly lovingly made for her, Lola never removed it while in hiding.
Survival after the war was not easy as Lola was shuffled from one refuge to another, from one unfamiliar family to the next. She was finally reunited with a maternal uncle in September 1945 just before she turned 11. With him and his family, Lola learned to be “happy again.” Four years later, the family immigrated to America, where they started anew …
Lola grew up in New York City, married, and had a family of her own. Her husband, too, had been a hidden child, but the two never talked about their experiences: “After the war, many hidden children – those in Europe, those in America, those in Israel – have something in common: silence,” she writes. For almost half a century, she remained silent … until Memorial Day weekend in 1991, when a New York magazine reporter writing a book about hidden children “opens the floodgates” with her interview.
Finally able to release the frightened child, the adult Kaufman donated that childhood dress to the Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC, then went on tour throughout the country with the dress to talk, talk, talk. That story became this book, providing haunting testimony in just the right language for older children to understand one of the most tragic events of modern history.
In all the bleakness and terror, readers are reminded of the true heroes, the everyday people who risked their own very real death by trying to save the lives of hunted Jewish neighbors and friends. Kaufman notes that an estimated 1% of the non-Jewish population in Europe helped Jews. She notes her brave rescuer – “someone I never knew and barely ever saw, who risked everything to save my life” – was officially honored in Israel in 1994 as one of the “The Righteous Among the Nations,” together with her son and husband.
Kaufman asks her own self, ” …if the situation were reversed and I were in [rescuer] Anna’s place, would I do what she did?” Indeed, we all need to ask ourselves that question … and be ready and committed to answer …
Readers: Middle Grade, Young Adult
Published: 2008
A balanced review of a haunting story.
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this is my favorite book in the world my teacher read it 2 me in the 4 grade and i fell in love with it i wish i had it so i can read it when i want 2 can somebody giv me a website where i can read the book for free
You are obviously a very mature reader to have understood this book in 4th grade. The Holocaust is a difficult topic for one so young!
I hope you will keep reading! Do you know T4 by Ann Clare LeZotte? If you appreciated Hidden Girl, I think you might also find this one challenging and illuminating both.
As for that website … keep reading. And writing. You never know where all those literary adventures will take you as you get older!
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yeah this book is the best im in 10th and my class is read this book i love it
realy its average is 4th grade im in 5th and reading it
i read this in 3rd
we read it in 7th grade
That’s great! And what did you think?
why does war and stuff have to happen!
im a canadian and my parents are indians they always tell me how the british ruined india!
this story made me cry but another did to i hope nothing like this happens ever again!
War happens because it is a part of life and nobody can change that.
I am in 6th grade reading this and it is hard to understand…. I need this thank you
It is also a short book as well
Keith S
Was a very sad book to read
I’m in fifth grade an d I read it for a project. Made me cry how she was alone so long
i love this book and its sad how much she went to place after when her mom dad grandma dies so most people cant relate how the people in the holocaust felt it was devestating to here and see what the holocaust was i felt bad for lola she went throug alot to be what she is today she has potential and she is brave for telling the devesating life she had as a child but right now she is happy to be with her husband and her family thats all i have to say and thatnksa for having a comment box for this site
SI BookDragon i appreciate you for having this to express our feelings
Given your appreciation for this book, you might want to check out some of these titles:
Hidden: A Child’s Story of the Holocaust by Loïc Dauvillier
Hidden Like Anne Frank: 14 True Stories of Survival by Marcel Prins & Peter Henk Steenhuis
Odette’s Secrets by Maryann Macdonald
T4: A Novel by Ann Clare LeZotte
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