Richard Hurowitz
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“If you’re good at a sport, they attach the medals to your shirts and then they shine in some museum,” he told his son. But good deeds were of a different type, he believed. “These are medals that are pinned to the soul and will be recognized in the Heavenly Kingdom, not on this earth.”
― In the Garden of the Righteous: The Heroes Who Risked Their Lives to Save Jews During the Holocaust
― In the Garden of the Righteous: The Heroes Who Risked Their Lives to Save Jews During the Holocaust
“Like the nuns in Assisi, one of whom cooked a huge meal for hidden Jews to break the fast on Yom Kippur, the sisters had a respect for the religious beliefs of their wards. Only the mother superior allegedly knew they were Jewish, although others clearly did as well; as Goldenberg recalled, “it’s not logical that an Italian child between eight and ten doesn’t know any Catholic prayers.” The sons of the chief rabbi of Genoa were also hidden there, and the nun who put them to bed each night, Mother Marta Folcia, would tell them to secretly kiss her finger rather than the cross she held and then to say the Shema Yisrael quietly before falling asleep. When German soldiers inspected the boardinghouse every few months, looking for Jewish children, the boys carefully recited Catholic prayers such as the Ave Maria and Pater Noster that had been drilled into them several times a day at the convent. The mother superior stood behind the officer, mouthing the words, in case any of the children forgot in their panic.”
― In the Garden of the Righteous: The Heroes Who Risked Their Lives to Save Jews During the Holocaust
― In the Garden of the Righteous: The Heroes Who Risked Their Lives to Save Jews During the Holocaust
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